FDA ties chicken feed to salmonella in egg recall

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – Bacteria found in chicken  feed used at two Iowa farms has been linked to a salmonella  outbreak that prompted the recall of more than a half billion  contaminated eggs, U.S. regulators said yesterday.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said it would keep  investigating to determine whether the bacteria originated in  the chicken feed or arrived there from another source.

“We do not know at this point how, when or where this feed  may have been contaminated,” said Jeff Farrar, U.S. Food and  Drug Administration associate commissioner for food protection.  “That’s part of our ongoing investigation and we’ll work very  hard to try and determine that.”
The contaminated feed was produced at a feed mill that is  part of Wright County Egg operation and also went out to the  second farm linked to the outbreak, Hillandale Farms of Iowa,  FDA said.

The FDA collected around 600 samples from 24 possible  sources of contamination on the two Iowa farms, said Sherri  McGarry, foodborne outbreak coordinator.

Several Wright County Egg samples tested positive for  salmonella, including feed, manure swabs and environmental  swabs from a barn. “The sense that the investigators have is that there’s  evidence of contamination of the farm. While they have found it  in the feed, they are not concluding any type of  cause-and-effect relationship,” said FDA principal Deputy  Commissioner Joshua Sharfstein.

The DNA in Wright County Egg farm samples matched the DNA  of the bacteria in the outbreak, but feed ingredients may not  have been the originating point for the salmonella outbreak.

“This may well just be that the birds got in and  contaminated or there’s just contamination in the facility  overall,” said Joshua Sharfstein, FDA principal deputy  commissioner. “So we’ll obviously be taking a look at  everything, all the pieces of the puzzle as it comes  together.”

The massive egg recalls came weeks after a new FDA rule  took effect that tightened safety rules at large producers and  required testing in poultry houses for salmonella bacteria.

The egg rule did not specifically address testing feed for  contamination, FDA officials said.

The outbreak, largest since the 1970s, may be linked to  almost 2,400 cases of salmonella-related illnesses around the  country since May 1, although at least 930 such cases are  reported during this time frame on an average year.