
Meat Vulnerabilities to Economic Food Adulteration Require New Analytical Solutions
Author(s) -
Christophe Cavin,
Geoffrey Cottenet,
Kevin M. Cooper,
Pascal Zbinden
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
chimia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.387
H-Index - 55
eISSN - 2673-2424
pISSN - 0009-4293
DOI - 10.2533/chimia.2018.697
Subject(s) - traceability , business , transparency (behavior) , veterinary drugs , meat packing industry , food safety , risk analysis (engineering) , food supply , supply chain , microbiology and biotechnology , food science , computer science , agricultural science , marketing , computer security , biology , veterinary medicine , medicine , software engineering
Meat has been identified as one of the food categories at most risk of food fraud. Meat species substitution has been in the spotlight with the European horse meat scandal in 2013. Analysis of cases reported on the web shows that incidents of meat substitution are still recurring worldwide. Altogether these cases highlight significant weaknesses in the supply chain transparency and traceability of raw meat materials. This has triggered recent progress from the food industry to apply new software tools enabling the mapping of meat supply chains. Nevertheless, a meat vulnerability assessment showed that meat and derivatives are highly susceptible to many fraudulent malpractices. Therefore, more effective measures are needed to manage the risk and new analytical solutions are required to increase the deterrence of meat adulteration and rapid detection of fraud. DNA-based methods have evolved rapidly as shown with the application of the new LCD array and Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) in order to detect broad meat species adulteration. Moreover, new technologies such as NGS together with the Rapid Evaporative Ionization Mass Spectrometry (REIMS) are emerging as a really promising association of analytical approaches for rapid detection of several malpractices.