The efficacy and safety of high-pressure processing of food
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Author
EFSA Panel on Biological Hazards (BIOHAZ Panel)
Koutsoumanis, Konstantinos
Alvarez-Ordóñez, Avelino
Bolton, Declan
Bover-Cid, Sara
Chemaly, Marianne
Davies, Robert
De Cesare, Alessandra
Herman, Lieve
Hilbert, Friederike
Lindqvist, Roland
Nauta, Maarten
Peixe, Luisa
Ru, Giuseppe
Simmons, Marion
Skandamis, Panagiotis
Suffredini, Elisabetta
Castle, Laurence
Crotta, Matteo
Grob, Konrad
Milana, Maria Rosaria
Petersen, Annette
Roig Sagués, Artur Xavier
Vinagre Silva, Filipa
Barthélémy, Eric
Christodoulidou, Anna
Messens, Winy
Allende, Ana
Publication date
2022-03-08ISSN
1831-4732
Abstract
High-pressure processing (HPP) is a non-thermal treatment in which, for microbial inactivation, foods are subjected to isostatic pressures (P) of 400–600 MPa with common holding times (t) from 1.5 to 6 min. The main factors that influence the efficacy (log10 reduction of vegetative microorganisms) of HPP when applied to foodstuffs are intrinsic (e.g. water activity and pH), extrinsic (P and t) and microorganism-related (type, taxonomic unit, strain and physiological state). It was concluded that HPP of food will not present any additional microbial or chemical food safety concerns when compared to other routinely applied treatments (e.g. pasteurisation). Pathogen reductions in milk/colostrum caused by the current HPP conditions applied by the industry are lower than those achieved by the legal requirements for thermal pasteurisation. However, HPP minimum requirements (P/t combinations) could be identified to achieve specific log10 reductions of relevant hazards based on performance criteria (PC) proposed by international standard agencies (5–8 log10 reductions). The most stringent HPP conditions used industrially (600 MPa, 6 min) would achieve the above-mentioned PC, except for Staphylococcus aureus. Alkaline phosphatase (ALP), the endogenous milk enzyme that is widely used to verify adequate thermal pasteurisation of cows’ milk, is relatively pressure resistant and its use would be limited to that of an overprocessing indicator. Current data are not robust enough to support the proposal of an appropriate indicator to verify the efficacy of HPP under the current HPP conditions applied by the industry. Minimum HPP requirements to reduce Listeria monocytogenes levels by specific log10 reductions could be identified when HPP is applied to ready-to-eat (RTE) cooked meat products, but not for other types of RTE foods. These identified minimum requirements would result in the inactivation of other relevant pathogens (Salmonella and Escherichia coli) in these RTE foods to a similar or higher extent.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
663/664 - Aliments i nutrició. Enologia. Olis. Greixos
Pages
195
Publisher
Wiley Open Access
Is part of
EFSA Journal
Citation
Koutsoumanis, Konstantinos, Avelino Alvarez‐Ordóñez, Declan Bolton, Sara Bover‐Cid, Marianne Chemaly, Robert Davies, and Alessandra De Cesare et al. 2022. "The Efficacy And Safety Of High‐Pressure Processing Of Food". EFSA Journal 20 (3). doi:10.2903/j.efsa.2022.7128.
Program
Funcionalitat i Seguretat Alimentària
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- ARTICLES CIENTÍFICS [2160]
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