Abstract

Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) has become a significant tool in investigating foodborne disease outbreaks and some countries have incorporated WGS into national food control systems. However, WGS poses technical challenges that deter developing countries from incorporating it into their food safety management system. A rapid scoping review was conducted, followed by a focus group session, to understand the current situation regarding the use of WGS for foodborne disease surveillance and food monitoring at the global level and identify key limiting factors for developing countries in adopting WGS for their food control systems. The results showed that some developed nations routinely use WGS in their food surveillance systems resulting in more precise understanding of the causes of outbreaks. In developing nations, knowledge of WGS exists in the academic/research sectors; however, there is limited understanding at the government level regarding the usefulness of WGS for food safety regulatory activities. Thus, incorporation of WGS is extremely limited in most developing nations. While some countries lack the capacity to collect and analyze the data generated from WGS, the most significant technical gap in most developing countries is in data interpretation using bioinformatics. The gaps in knowledge and capacities between developed and developing nations regarding use of WGS likely introduce an inequality in international food trade, and thus, relevant international organizations, as well as the countries that are already proficient in the use of WGS, have significant roles in assisting developing nations to be able to fully benefit from the technology and its applications in food safety management.

Highlights

  • New foodborne pathogen analytical technologies often hold the promise of improving food safety, and wholegenome sequencing (WGS) is one of them (Deng et al, 2016)

  • There were no data that any developing country had initiated using Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) in the government system and this was further confirmed by the focus group session with experts from developing countries

  • Nonexperts may wrongly perceive that introduction of WGS is creating more food safety problems rather than solving them, but experts state that the technology brings major public health benefits by minimizing the scale of the outbreaks and preventing recurrence of the problem from the same source (Kwong et al, 2015)

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Summary

Introduction

New foodborne pathogen analytical technologies often hold the promise of improving food safety, and wholegenome sequencing (WGS) is one of them (Deng et al, 2016). This technology positively contributes to epidemiological investigations of foodborne outbreaks, to the identification of emerging health threats, to genome characterization of bacterial isolates, and to identify virulence, antimicrobial resistance (AMR), and other relevant genes in complex samples (Nadon et al, 2017; Taboada et al, 2017). As WGS evolves from a research tool to a practical food safety management instrument,.

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