The viral fragments do not pose a threat to consumers, officials said. “To date, we have seen nothing thatwould change our assessment that the commercial milk supply is safe,” the Food and Drug Administration said in a statement on Tuesday (Wednesday NZT).
Over the past month, a bird flu virus known as H5N1 has been detected in more than 30 dairy herds in eight states. The virus is also known to have infected one farmworker, whose only symptom was pink eye.
Scientists have been critical of the federal response, saying that the US Agriculture Department has been too slow to share important data and has not adequately pursued the testing of cattle for the infection.
Finding viral fragments in milk from the commercial supply chain is not ideal, but the genetic material poses little risk to consumers who drink milk, said David O’Connor, a virus expert at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
“The risk of getting infected from milk that has viral fragments in it should be nil,” he said. “The genetic material can’t replicate on its own.”
Officials did not say how many samples of pasteurised milk had tested positive for viral fragments or where those samples had come from. Those are key questions, experts said. Roughly one-third of the samples tested positive, according to two people with knowledge of the data who were not authorised to speak publicly.
If the fragments are present in many samples throughout the commercial milk supply, it would suggest that the outbreak is likely to be far more widespread than has been believed.
Last week, The New York Times reported that the virus had been detected in a herd of North Carolina dairy cows that had no symptoms of illness.
“The problem in dairy cows might be much bigger than we know,” O’Connor said. “That would be the concern — not that the milk itself would be a risk.”
The FDA said that it was studying milk samples from several sources, including infected cows, the milk processing chain and grocery store shelves. Federal officials are still waiting for results from experiments designed to determine whether the milk samples might contain active virus, according to two people familiar with ongoing federal reviews.
Those tests take much longer than so-called PCR tests that determine whether there is viral material in the milk supply.
Federal officials have repeatedly reassured consumers that the commercial milk supply is safe, noting that dairy producers are required to keep milk from sick animals out of the human food supply.
Nearly all milk produced on US farms is pasteurised, a process designed to kill viruses with heat. Pasteurisation should also inactivate flu viruses, which are known to be fragile and heat-sensitive, experts said.
Only recently has the FDA been testing pasteurisation’s effectiveness on H5N1. The risk of contracting the virus from unpasteurised milk products remains unknown, but regulators have long cautioned consumers that raw milk poses a variety of disease risks.
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been monitoring flu testing data and flu-related emergency room visits. “We have not seen anything elevated to date at the local, state or national level,” said Dr Nirav Shah, the principal deputy director of the agency.
The discovery of viral fragments in milk has prompted significant concern in the White House over how to avoid raising undue alarm about the dairy supply, according to people familiar with internal deliberations who were not authorised to speak publicly.
Federal officials are expected to address the findings in a news briefing in the coming days.
Brian Ronholm, director of food policy at Consumer Reports, an advocacy organisation, said it would be “very critical” for officials to clearly communicate the findings and educate consumers about what they mean.
Milk from farms is pooled into thousands of gallons that would greatly dilute any virus present. Pasteurisation further slashes levels of the virus.
Soon after the September 11 attacks, Michael Osterholm, an infectious disease expert at the University of Minnesota, helped the federal government plan for a possible bioterrorism attack that might use botulism neurotoxin, a highly lethal virus, to contaminate milk.
Working with the dairy industry, he and others identified pasteurisation conditions that would inactivate the neurotoxin. That experience reassures him that H5N1 is highly unlikely to pose any problems, Osterholm said.
“With a virus like this, I would have to believe even if you had the highest levels of virus activity you could ever imagine in the actual milk from the udder of an infected cow, it would be diluted millions of times over going into pasteurisation.”
Ingested milk is also broken down by the body’s digestive and immune systems, so “I wouldn’t worry about remnants”, said Dr Nahid Bhadelia, director of the Boston University Center on Emerging Infectious Diseases.
“As long it’s not a live virus, it is unlikely that there’s any health risks,” she said.
Infected people — and cows — might carry remnants of viral genetic material long after the active infection has resolved. That is why PCR tests for Covid sometimes produce positive results after a person has recovered from illness.
The affected cows seem to have large amounts of virus in their milk, suggesting that it might take some time to become virus-free, Bhadelia said.
“But the interesting part of this is that we don’t have a sense of how long it takes cows to clear the virus,” she said.