March 16, 2025

Aging might not be enough to eliminate H5N1 viruses in raw-milk cheese – University of Minnesota Twin Cities

Frameofminds / iStockCheeses made with raw milk are popular in the United States and the rest of the world, and the products are required to be aged for at least 60 days to inactivate bacterial pathogens. The fairly recent detection of H5N1 avian flu in dairy cattle, however, raises questions about whether the same process can inactive the virus.The answer appears to be no, in most instances, scientists from Cornell University reported today on bioRxiv, a preprint server.The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the state of New York funded the study as part of efforts to assess the threat of H5N1 avian flu from potentially contaminated raw milk cheese. Separately, the FDA in December 2024 launched an effort to test nearly 300 60-day aged raw milk cheese samples, and today it provided an update.In an update today, the FDA said that, of 110 samples that have been collected so far, 96 were negative on polymerase chain reaction testing. Tests on 14 others are still in progress. No samples have yet to test positive for H5N1.In the Cornell study, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, researchers made raw-milk cheese from raw milk spiked with H5N1 under different pH levels, ranging from 6.6 to 5.0—all in the acidic range. They also tested samples of raw milk cheddar cheese that was inadvertently produced with H5N1-contaminated raw milk after an outbreak in dairy cows on a farm.In cheese made with the spiked milk, tests show that infectious virus remained throughout the cheese-making process and for up to 60 days of aging at the 6.6- and 5.8-pH levels. The virus didn’t survive at the 5.0-pH level, which is the most acidic, supporting earlier findings that influenza A viruses are sensitive to acidic environments.Ingestion of contaminated raw dairy products repeatedly may increase the probability of infections.The investigators said their findings raise food safety concerns, not just for aged raw-milk cheese, but for other raw-milk products, especially given that the virus can persist for up to 56 days under refrigeration. “Although the infectious dose of the virus to humans is not known, ingestion of contaminated raw dairy products repeatedly may increase the probability of infections,” the team wrote.In other avian flu developments, the New York City Health Department today said it is investigating two cats in separate households that have H5 avian flu infections.In a statement, officials didn’t say how the cats might have been exposed. They urged people to avoid feeding pets raw food or raw milk and to prevent animals from roaming outdoors, where they may come into contact with wild birds or other animals.Officials added that the risk to people remains low.Also today, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) reported more H5N1 detections in poultry in two states. They include two backyard flocks in different counties in Oklahoma and a live-poultry market in Philadelphia. The measles outbreak in Texas rises to 198 cases, while New Mexico’s outbreak climbs to 30 cases.Two people with reported exposure associated with the Texas and New Mexico outbreaks now have symptoms. The patient may have exposed people at Washington Dulles International Airport and a pediatric emergency department in Maryland.Suspected case-patients, one of them a woman who became ill while pregnant, have links to the western part of Uganda.The newly confirmed cases are linked to a 4-year-old boy who died from his Ebola infection last week.Authorities say cases in Philadelphia and New York have no connection to ongoing outbreaks.The cats were part of a group that lived on a poultry farm hit by the virus a few weeks earlier.Some of the terminated grants focused on boosting uptake in minority populations, with the cuts covering a range of vaccines.Like the recent WHO recommendation, the picks change the H3N2 strain for egg- and cell-based vaccines.These men had higher rates of shortness of breath and fatigue than those without erectile dysfunction and had higher depression/anxiety and pain/discomfort scores than before infection.Help make CIDRAP’s vital work possibleCIDRAP – Center for Infectious Disease Research & PolicyResearch and Innovation Office, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MNEmail us© 2025 Regents of the University of Minnesota. All rights Reserved.The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity educator and employerResearch and Innovation Office |   Contact U of M  |  Privacy PolicyNewsletter subscribe

Source: https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/avian-influenza-bird-flu/aging-might-not-be-enough-eliminate-h5n1-viruses-raw-milk-cheese

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