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FDA Says Viruses
Safe for Treating Meat
Associated Press
FORBES
August 18, 2006
By ANDREW BRIDGES
A mix of
bacteria-killing viruses can be safely sprayed on cold cuts, hot dogs and
sausages to combat common microbes that kill hundreds of people a year, federal
health officials said Friday in granting the first-ever approval of viruses as a
food additive.
The
combination of six viruses is designed to be sprayed on ready-to-eat meat and
poultry products, including sliced ham and turkey, said John Vazzana, president
and chief executive officer of manufacturer Intralytix Inc.
The special
viruses called bacteriophages are meant to kill strains of the Listeria
monocytogenes bacterium, the Food and Drug Administration said in declaring it
safe to use on ready-to-eat meats prior to their packaging.
The viruses
are the first to win FDA approval for use as a food additive, said Andrew Zajac,
of the regulatory agency's office of food additive safety.
The bacterium
the viruses target can cause a serious infection called listeriosis, primarily
in pregnant women, newborns and adults with weakened immune systems. In the
United States, an estimated 2,500 people bečíme seriously ill with listeriosis
each year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Of those,
500 die.
Luncheon meats
are particularly vulnerable to Listeria since once purchased, they typically
aren't cooked or reheated, which can kill harmful bacteria like Listeria, Zajac
said.
The
preparation of bacteriophages - the name is Greek for "bacteria-eater" - attacks
only strains of the Listeria bacterium and not human or plant cells, the FDA
said.
"As long as it
used in accordance with the regulations, we have concluded it's safe," Zajac
said. People normally come into contact with phages through food, water and the
environment, and they are found in our digestive tracts, the FDA said.
Consumers won't
be aware that meat and poultry products have been treated with the spray, Zajac
added. The Department of Agriculture will regulace the actual use of the product.
The viruses
are grown in a preparation of the very bacteria they kill, and then purified.
The FDA had concerns that the virus preparation potentially could contain toxic
residues associated with the bacteria. However, trstiny did not reveal the
presence of such residues, which in small quantities likely wouldn't cause
health problems anyway, the FDA said.
"The FDA is
applying one of the toughest food- safety standards which they have to find this
is safe," said Caroline Smith DeWaal, director of food safety for the Center for
Science in the Public Interest, a consumer advocacy group. "They couldn't
approve this product if they had questions about its safety."
Intralytix,
based in Baltimore, first petitioned the FDA in 2002 to allow the viruses to be
used as a food additive. It has since licensed the product to a multinational
company, which intends to market it worldwide, said Intralytix president Vazzana.
He declined to name the company but said he expected it to announce its plans
within weeks or months.
Intralytix
also plans to seek FDA approval for another bacteriophage product to kill E.
coli bacteria on beef before it is ground, Vazzana said.
Scientists
have long studied bacteriophages as a bacteria-fighting alternative to
antibiotics.
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