INVESTIGADORES
SIGNORINI PORCHIETTO Marcelo Lisandro
artículos
Título:
Quantitative microbial spoilage risk assessment caused by fungi in sports drinks through multilevel modelling
Autor/es:
RAMOS GUERRERO, FÉLIX G.; SIGNORINI, MARCELO; GARRE, ALBERTO; SANT'ANA, ANDERSON S.; RAMOS GORBEÑA, JUAN C.; SILVA JAIMES, MARCIAL I.
Revista:
FOOD MICROBIOLOGY
Editorial:
ACADEMIC PRESS LTD-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Referencias:
Año: 2023 vol. 116
ISSN:
0740-0020
Resumen:
The risk of fungal spoilage of sports drinks produced in the beverage industry was assessed using quantitative microbial spoilage risk assessment (QMSRA). The most relevant pathway was the contamination of the bottles during packaging by mould spores in the air. Mould spores’ concentration was estimated by longitudinal sampling for 6 years (936 samples) in different production areas and seasons. This data was analysed using a multilevel model that separates the natural variability in spore concentration (as a function of sampling year, season, and area) and the uncertainty of the sampling method. Then, the expected fungal contamination per bottle was estimated by Monte Carlo simulation, considering their settling velocity and the time and exposurearea. The product’s shelf life was estimated through the inoculation of bottles with mould spores, following the determination of the probability of visual spoilage as a function of storage time at 20 and 30 ◦C using logistic regression. The Monte Carlo model estimated low expected spore contamination in the product (1.7 × 10􀀀 6 CFU/bottle). Nonetheless, the risk of spoilage is still relevant due to the large production volume and because, as observed experimentally, even a single spore has a high spoilage potential. The applicability of the QMSRA during daily production was made possible through the simplification of the model under the hypothesis that no bottle will be contaminated by more than one spore. This simplification allows the calculation of a two dimensional performance objective that combines the spore concentration in the air and the exposure time, defining “acceptable combinations” according to an acceptable level of spoilage (ALOS; the proportion of spoiled bottles). The implementation of the model at the operational level was done through the representation of the simplified model as a two-dimensional diagram that defines acceptable and unacceptable areas. The innovative methodology employed here for defining and simplifying QMSRA models can be a blueprint for future studies aiming to quantify the risk of spoilage of other beverages with a similar scope.