The Effects of Cetylpyridinium Chloride (Cecure® CPC Antimicrobial1) on Campylobacter Spp. on Raw Poultry:A Review


Authors

  • A.L. Waldroup Safe Foods Corporation, 4801 North Shore Drive, North Little Rock, AR 72118, USA
  • K.L. Beers Safe Foods Corporation, 4801 North Shore Drive, North Little Rock, AR 72118, USA
  • P.E. Cook Safe Foods Corporation, 4801 North Shore Drive, North Little Rock, AR 72118, USA
  • E.A. Dell Safe Foods Corporation, 4801 North Shore Drive, North Little Rock, AR 72118, USA
  • R. Odglen Safe Foods Corporation, 4801 North Shore Drive, North Little Rock, AR 72118, USA
  • R.A. Baker Safe Foods Corporation, 4801 North Shore Drive, North Little Rock, AR 72118, USA
  • C.W. Coleman Safe Foods Corporation, 4801 North Shore Drive, North Little Rock, AR 72118, USA
  • B.A. Smith Safe Foods Corporation, 4801 North Shore Drive, North Little Rock, AR 72118, USA
  • B.W. Maingi Safe Foods Corporation, 4801 North Shore Drive, North Little Rock, AR 72118, USA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3923/ijps.2010.305.308

Keywords:

Campylobacter, Cecure® CPC antimicrobial, poultry

Abstract

Published findings have clearly demonstrated that between 0.1 and 0.5%, Cecure® is by far the most efficacious antimicrobial treatment available for controlling Campylobacter on poultry carcasses. Safe Foods Corporation’s commercially available pre-chill and post-chill Cecure® applications should be fully capable of meeting and exceeding any Campylobacter government regulation that will be issued, regardless of the sampling plan or specific isolation methodology that may be mandated. Safe Foods’ previous laboratory studies and in-plant experience, as well as the published findings of other scientists, suggest that Cecure® will be able to achieve at least a 1-2.5 log reduction in Campylobacter levels on pre-chill broilers, with incidence rates being reduced from 80-90% to no greater than 7-9% with a concentration of Cecure® between 0.1 and 0.5%. With a post-chill Cecure® application, the antimicrobial should virtually eliminate the organism (2-3 log reduction) with an expected incidence rate of no greater than 3-5% at a Cecure® concentration between 0.1 and 0.5%.

References

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Beers, K., J. Rheingans, K. Chinault, P. Cook, B. Smith and A. Waldroup, 2006. Microbial efficacy of commercial application of Cecure® CPC Antimicrobial to ingesta-contaminated pre-chill broiler carcasses. Int. J. Poult. Sci., 5: 698-703.

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Waldroup, A., C. Coleman and H. Brown, 1999. Pilot Plant Trials-pre-chill Application of Cetylpyridinium Chloride to Broilers. Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, DC.

Waldroup, A., C. Coleman and K. Beers, 2000. Commercialization of Cetylpyridinium Chloride for Use in the Poultry Industry. Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, DC.

Waldroup, A.L., B.M. Rathgeber and R.H. Forsythe, 1992. Effects of six modifications on the incidence and levels of spoilage and pathogenic organisms on commercially processed post-chill broilers. J. Applied Poult. Res., 1: 226-234.

Waldroup, A.L., B.M. Rathgeber, R.E. Heirholzer, L. Smoot and L.M. Martin et al., 1993. Effects of reprocessing on microbiological quality of commercial pre-chill broiler carcasses. J. Applied Poult. Res., 2: 111-116.

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Published

2010-03-15

Issue

Section

Research Article

How to Cite

Waldroup, A., Beers, K., Cook, P., Dell, E., Odglen, R., Baker, R., Coleman, C., Smith, B., & Maingi, B. (2010). The Effects of Cetylpyridinium Chloride (Cecure® CPC Antimicrobial1) on Campylobacter Spp. on Raw Poultry:A Review. International Journal of Poultry Science, 9(4), 305–308. https://doi.org/10.3923/ijps.2010.305.308

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