Volume 29, Number 12—December 2023
Research Letter
Zoonotic Marine Nematode Infection of Fish Products in Landlocked Country, Slovakia
Abstract
Fish products in Slovakia have been heavily infected with Anisakis spp. larvae, which causes human anisakiasis. We found larvae in all tested samples of frozen Atlantic herring. Anisakid allergen t-Ani s7 testing revealed 2 positive cases in humans, signaling need for health authorities to closely monitor zoonotic marine parasites, even in inland areas.
Food safety is an unquestioned global public health imperative. Strict controls on food before release to markets are intended to prevent disease caused by agents of infectious diseases, including parasitoses such as human anisakiasis. Anisakiasis, an emerging zoonosis, is caused mainly by marine nematodes of the genus Anisakis. They mature in dolphins and whales, but their third-stage larvae, which reside in the flesh, gonads, and body cavities of marine fish, can infect humans who consume raw or undercooked fish (1). Most human cases are reported in Japan, Spain, and South Korea (1).
Zoonotic diseases caused by marine parasites have been largely confined to coastal regions, but surveillance by health authorities in landlocked countries is lacking. However, global trade and the increasing popularity of raw fish consumption have contributed to emergence of that disease. We provide data on extensive infection of fish products with Anisakis larvae in Slovakia, a landlocked country in central Europe. We also report seropositive cases in a group of volunteers regularly eating fish products. We conducted this study in accordance with ethics standards in the 2013 revision of the Declaration of Helsinki of 1975. It was approved by the ethics committee of the Institute of Parasitology, Slovak Academy of Sciences (EC/01/2018; December 14, 2018).
We examined 100 frozen Atlantic herring (Clupea harengus) provided by a fish product supplier and 18 packages of ready-to-eat pickled herring from local supermarkets for anisakid larvae. We found 4,163 larvae in frozen Atlantic herring at an intensity of infection of 2–368 (mean 42) larvae/fish (Figure, panels A–C, E–H). Although we found most larvae in the abdominal cavity, we also found them in the muscles of 1/3 and the gonads of 1/5 of fish we examined. Although all larvae were dead, even dead parasites or their residues in contaminated fish products can cause allergic reaction in sensitized persons (2,3). In addition, we found anisakids in 1/3 of ready-to-eat pickled herring (1–9 larvae/fish) (Figure, panel D).
We morphologically identified larvae as Anisakis spp. and used several larvae for genotyping based on the ≈800 bp–long internal transcribed spacer region. Sequences of all isolates were identical to those of A. simplex sensu stricto (Appendix), considered the predominant agent of human anisakiasis (4).
We used a Trisakis 170, A. simplex IgE-ELISA kit (Laboratorio de Parasitología, Facultad de Farmacia, Universidad de Santiago de Compostela, Santiago de Compostela, Spain) to test IgE sensitization to Anisakis spp. in a human population. The kit detects IgE to the recombinant allergens r-Ani s 1 and t-Ani s 7 in human serum, which we collected in 2020 from 91 volunteers who regularly ate fish products. The allergen tests are highly specific (up to 100%), as deduced also from primary amino acid sequences of both allergens that have no significant homologies with other allergens to which humans are known to be sensitized. Sensitivity reaches 61.1% for Ani s 1 and 93.9% for Ani s 7; many researchers consider serum truly positive only when testing positive to Ani s 1 or Ani s 7 (5,6). Moreover, Ani s 7 and, probably, Ani s 1 are excretory-secretory allergens that are recognized by the host immune system only in the course of an Anisakis infection (5). Of 91 serum samples collected in 2020, sensitization to Anisakis allergen t-Ani s 7 was detected in 2 (2.2%) samples. The positive case-patients, both women, had no clinical symptoms of sensitization to Anisakis but had experienced allergy symptoms on several occasions in the past.
Any report of sensitization to Anisakis in Slovakia is unusual in that it is a landlocked country. Given the low level of raw fish consumption in Slovakia, the 2.2% rate of detected positivity was relatively high. In a similar study in Norway, 0/993 blood donors and 1/414 (0.2%) patients with high IgE levels tested positive for anisakiasis (6). In a study in Croatia in which the same ELISA method was used as in our study, 3.5% positivity was found in persons living on islands, but only 1.5% in persons in urban areas on the coast (7). A 15.4% positivity rate was detected in an adult population in Spain (8), whereas seroprevalence was only 0.4% in blood donors in Galicia, in northwestern Spain (9). In the future, IgE for Ani s 1, Ani s 4, Ani s 5, and Anis s 9, heat-resistant allergens that cause most clinical episodes of the allergic form of anisakiasis, should be evaluated.
Monitoring fish products intended for human consumption for parasites currently receives insufficient attention. Although all parasites we found were dead, frequent presence of Anisakis spp. in herring poses a potential risk to sensitive persons who might suffer a hyperallergic reaction. In addition, some Anisakis larvae can survive freezing (10), so risk of infection remains even in fish products frozen for a short time. In conclusion, the results of our study signal the need for health authorities to closely monitor marine parasites with zoonotic potential, even in inland areas.
Dr. Oros is a senior researcher at the Institute of Parasitology, Slovak Academy of Sciences. His research focuses on the integrative taxonomy, systematics, and phylogeny of multicellular parasites of bony fishes, including etiological agents of fish-borne human diseases.
Acknowledgments
We thank fish product supplier who generously provided frozen herrings for parasitologic examination.
This study was supported by the Slovak Research and Development Agency (APVV SK-CZ-RD-21-0078 to M.O.) and Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic (LUASK22045 to T.S.).
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Cite This ArticleOriginal Publication Date: November 14, 2023
Table of Contents – Volume 29, Number 12—December 2023
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Please use the form below to submit correspondence to the authors or contact them at the following address:
Mikuláš Oros, Institute of Parasitology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Hlinkova 3, 040 01, Košice, Slovak Republic
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