Although the risk of allergen cross-contact is well understood, the addition of sesame to FDA’s “big nine” list of Major Food Allergens required a renewed focus on preventive allergen controls and validated/verified food allergen testing methods to detect contamination and mislabeling.
Despite this attention, allergen control continues to be a major problem for the food and supplement industries. Why? System failures at every link in the chain.
EAS independent consultant and food safety expert, Steven Gendel, Ph.D, has 25 years FDA experience (most recently as FDA’s Food Allergen Coordinator) and nearly 10 years of industry experience with preventive allergen controls. He shares his thoughts on tackling the increasingly complex world of allergen cross-contact and allergen controls in this Q&A.
Gendel: The fact that we continue to see so many allergen-related food recalls shows that industry is still having problems designing and implementing effective allergen controls. Allergen control is not like pathogen control because you can’t remove the hazard at a critical control point once an undeclared allergen is in the supply chain.
Gendel: FASTER stands for the “Food Allergy Safety, Treatment, Education, and Research Act”.
This law has several parts, the most impactful one for food manufacturers being the addition of sesame to the list of Major Food Allergens, which took effect on Jan. 1, 2023.
Food manufacturers need to control sesame and sesame-derived ingredients the same way they do the other Major Food Allergens. This includes making sure labels are updated as needed, sesame is considered in facility risk evaluations, sanitation validations are updated as needed, and potential cross-contact is controlled.
Gendel: The first step is to have effective GMPs in place. It is important that we don’t lose sight of how important these are.
The next step is to be sure that facilities know what allergens are coming in, where they are stored, and where they are being used. All of this feeds into the process of doing a hazard evaluation that identifies where cross-contact and mislabeling are possible.
Gendel: As a broad description, the development of a Preventive Controls Program involves the following:
Gendel: Unfortunately, there are no simple answers to this problem. The biggest challenge is to be sure that you know your whole supply chain. Every step in the chain, including during transport, is an opportunity for something to go wrong, for allergen cross-contact to occur or for misidentification. As we are seeing, supply chains can change suddenly and in unexpected ways.
In addition, allergen-labeling-and-control regulations are not the same in all countries and are subject to change. This means that manufacturers cannot rely on history or past relationships alone to ensure allergen control.
The best things that a manufacturer can do is the following:
For more information on controlling allergen cross-contact and food allergen testing, check out our free webinar: Food Allergens and the FDA.
If you have questions about how this affects your company, contact EAS Consulting Group, a Certified Group company, and we’ll be glad to help.