
The CDC describes 2 genetically unrelated outbreaks of Listeria monocytogenes infections (outbreak A and outbreak B) linked to packaged salads from 2 different firms that were investigated simultaneously in 2021. Combined, the outbreaks caused 30 illnesses, 27 hospitalizations, and 4 deaths over 8 years.
Those investigations led to recalls of product from 2 different firms and highlight how L. monocytogenes contamination can persist for long periods and cause illnesses over many years. Outbreak A was investigated 3 times with illnesses occurring over 8 years, whereas illnesses in outbreak B occurred over 5 years.
Both outbreaks illustrate the importance of routine and epidemiologically directed sampling by state partners, without which these outbreaks likely would have gone unsolved. The outbreaks were the second and third multistate outbreaks of listeriosis linked to packaged salads, providing further documentation of the potential for L. monocytogenes infections from consumption of contaminated packaged salads.
Here is the full journal article: https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/31/12/25-0989_article