In September 2020, an unexpected increase in Salmonella Muenchen patient isolates and notifications was observed.We investigated the outbreak to identify the vehicle of infection.RKI defined cases as patients with laboratory-confirmed S. Muenchen infections reported between September 2020 and July 2021.Genomes of clinical, food, and animal S. Muenchen isolates were analysed using cgMLST.We conducted interviews and performed a frequency matched case-control study.We calculated frequencies and adjusted odds ratios (aOR) using logistic regression.We identified 301 cases in eight federal states in Germany.Hypothesisgenerating interviews did not provide a conclusive hint of a possible vehicle.S. Muenchen strains were detected in dried coconut pieces, milk powder used for chocolate production, and a wild swan, all with a cgMLST profile indistinguishable from the prominent node comprising 116 patient isolates.Cases included in the case-control study more often consumed dried coconut pieces (22/30) than controls (2/116) (aOR: 176 (95% confidence interval: 32-954)).In this investigation, cgMLST analysis presented identical strains in three different isolate sources.The case-control study supported dried coconut pieces as vehicle of infection demonstrating the importance of interdisciplinary investigations and underscoring the potential impact of unusual vehicles.
Staat et al. (Fri,) studied this question.