Donkey Milk Quality and Safety: Challenges of Using the ISO 11816-1 ALP Method for Pasteurization Verification
Vita Maria Marino, Iris Schadt, Giovanni Belvedere, Stefania La Terra, Margherita Caccamo, Cinzia Caggia

TL;DR
This study examines whether the ISO 11816-1 method for verifying pasteurization is suitable for donkey milk, finding it ineffective and proposing a new threshold.
Contribution
Proposes a new ALP threshold for donkey milk pasteurization verification to preserve nutraceutical properties.
Findings
Residual ALP values in donkey milk were below bovine thresholds, making the ISO method unsuitable.
A provisional ALP threshold of 61 mU/L is suggested for donkey milk pasteurization verification.
Native ALP levels varied widely and were influenced by lactose and physiological parameters.
Abstract
Donkey milk is valued for its similarity to human milk, low allergenicity, and high nutraceutical content, particularly lysozyme. As for milk from other species, donkey milk requires pasteurization for commercial sale. The ISO 11816-1 alkaline phosphatase (ALP) method, developed for cow’s milk, is currently used to verify pasteurization in donkey milk. This study evaluated whether the method distinguishes compliant from non-compliant treatments and investigated associations of native and residual ALP with chemical and physiological parameters. Milk from 14 Ragusano donkeys was sampled three times at three-month intervals (42 samples) and analyzed for chemical and physiological composition, lysozyme, and total antioxidant capacity. Samples underwent compliant and non-compliant heat treatments, and ALP was determined. All residual ALP values, even for non-compliant treatments, were well…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMilk Quality and Mastitis in Dairy Cows · Veterinary Equine Medical Research · Animal health and immunology
