Standard Standard

A comparison of the MPN and pour plate methods for estimating shellfish contamination by Escherichia coli. / Cooper, D. M. ; Mannion, Finn; Jones, Laurence et al.
In: Journal of Applied Microbiology, Vol. 135, No. 7, lxae163, 02.07.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

APA

CBE

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Cooper DM, Mannion F, Jones L, Pinn E, Sorby R, Malham S et al. A comparison of the MPN and pour plate methods for estimating shellfish contamination by Escherichia coli. Journal of Applied Microbiology. 2024 Jul 2;135(7):lxae163. Epub 2024 Jun 29. doi: 10.1093/jambio/lxae163

Author

Cooper, D. M. ; Mannion, Finn ; Jones, Laurence et al. / A comparison of the MPN and pour plate methods for estimating shellfish contamination by Escherichia coli. In: Journal of Applied Microbiology. 2024 ; Vol. 135, No. 7.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A comparison of the MPN and pour plate methods for estimating shellfish contamination by Escherichia coli

AU - Cooper, D. M.

AU - Mannion, Finn

AU - Jones, Laurence

AU - Pinn, Eunice

AU - Sorby, Rees

AU - Malham, Shelagh

AU - Le Vay, Lewis

PY - 2024/7/2

Y1 - 2024/7/2

N2 - Aims Shellfish production areas are classified for suitability for human consumption using counts of Escherichia coli in shellfish samples. Two alternative laboratory methods are approved in the European Union and UK for measuring E. coli in shellfish samples; the most probable number (MPN) and pour plate methods. These methods have inherently different statistical uncertainty and may give different counts for the same sample. Using two approaches: simulated data and spiking experiments, we investigate the theoretical properties of the two methods to determine their reliability for shellfish waters classification. Methods and results Assuming a Poisson distribution of E. coli in shellfish samples, we simulate concentrations in 10 000 samples using the MPN and pour plate methods. We show that for higher concentrations of E. coli the pour plate method becomes increasingly more reliable than the MPN method. The MPN method has higher probabilities than pour plate of generating results exceeding shellfish classification thresholds, while conversely having higher probabilities of failing to detect counts that exceed regulatory thresholds. The theoretical analysis also demonstrates that the MPN method can produce genuine extreme outliers, even when E. coli are randomly distributed within the sampled material. A laboratory spiking experiment showed results consistent with the theoretical analysis, suggesting the Poisson assumption used in the theoretical analysis is reasonable. Conclusion The large differences in statistical properties between the pour plate and MPN methods should be taken into consideration in classifying shellfish beds, with the pour plate method being more reliable over the crucial range of E. coli concentrations used to determine class boundaries.

AB - Aims Shellfish production areas are classified for suitability for human consumption using counts of Escherichia coli in shellfish samples. Two alternative laboratory methods are approved in the European Union and UK for measuring E. coli in shellfish samples; the most probable number (MPN) and pour plate methods. These methods have inherently different statistical uncertainty and may give different counts for the same sample. Using two approaches: simulated data and spiking experiments, we investigate the theoretical properties of the two methods to determine their reliability for shellfish waters classification. Methods and results Assuming a Poisson distribution of E. coli in shellfish samples, we simulate concentrations in 10 000 samples using the MPN and pour plate methods. We show that for higher concentrations of E. coli the pour plate method becomes increasingly more reliable than the MPN method. The MPN method has higher probabilities than pour plate of generating results exceeding shellfish classification thresholds, while conversely having higher probabilities of failing to detect counts that exceed regulatory thresholds. The theoretical analysis also demonstrates that the MPN method can produce genuine extreme outliers, even when E. coli are randomly distributed within the sampled material. A laboratory spiking experiment showed results consistent with the theoretical analysis, suggesting the Poisson assumption used in the theoretical analysis is reasonable. Conclusion The large differences in statistical properties between the pour plate and MPN methods should be taken into consideration in classifying shellfish beds, with the pour plate method being more reliable over the crucial range of E. coli concentrations used to determine class boundaries.

U2 - 10.1093/jambio/lxae163

DO - 10.1093/jambio/lxae163

M3 - Article

VL - 135

JO - Journal of Applied Microbiology

JF - Journal of Applied Microbiology

SN - 1365-2672

IS - 7

M1 - lxae163

ER -