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Food-borne norovirus-outbreak at a military base, Germany, 2009

BACKGROUND: Norovirus is often transmitted from person-to-person. Transmission may also be food-borne, but only few norovirus outbreak investigations have identified food items as likely vehicles of norovirus transmission through an analytical epidemiological study. During 7-9 January, 2009, 36 pers...

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Autores principales: Wadl, Maria, Scherer, Kathrin, Nielsen, Stine, Diedrich, Sabine, Ellerbroek, Lüppo, Frank, Christina, Gatzer, Renate, Hoehne, Marina, Johne, Reimar, Klein, Günter, Koch, Judith, Schulenburg, Jörg, Thielbein, Uta, Stark, Klaus, Bernard, Helen
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2831023/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20163705
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-10-30
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author Wadl, Maria
Scherer, Kathrin
Nielsen, Stine
Diedrich, Sabine
Ellerbroek, Lüppo
Frank, Christina
Gatzer, Renate
Hoehne, Marina
Johne, Reimar
Klein, Günter
Koch, Judith
Schulenburg, Jörg
Thielbein, Uta
Stark, Klaus
Bernard, Helen
author_facet Wadl, Maria
Scherer, Kathrin
Nielsen, Stine
Diedrich, Sabine
Ellerbroek, Lüppo
Frank, Christina
Gatzer, Renate
Hoehne, Marina
Johne, Reimar
Klein, Günter
Koch, Judith
Schulenburg, Jörg
Thielbein, Uta
Stark, Klaus
Bernard, Helen
author_sort Wadl, Maria
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Norovirus is often transmitted from person-to-person. Transmission may also be food-borne, but only few norovirus outbreak investigations have identified food items as likely vehicles of norovirus transmission through an analytical epidemiological study. During 7-9 January, 2009, 36 persons at a military base in Germany fell ill with acute gastroenteritis. Food from the military base's canteen was suspected as vehicle of infection, norovirus as the pathogen causing the illnesses. An investigation was initiated to describe the outbreak's extent, to verify the pathogen, and to identify modes of transmission and source of infection to prevent further cases. METHODS: For descriptive analysis, ill persons were defined as members of the military base with acute onset of diarrhoea or vomiting between 24 December 2008, and 3 February 2009, without detection of a pathogen other than norovirus in stools. We conducted a retrospective cohort study within the headquarters company. Cases were military base members with onset of diarrhoea or vomiting during 5-9 January. We collected information on demographics, food items eaten at the canteen and contact to ill persons or vomit, using a self-administered questionnaire. We compared attack rates (AR) in exposed and unexposed persons, using bivariable and multivariable logistic regression modelling. Stool specimens of ill persons and canteen employees, canteen food served during 5-7 January and environmental swabs were investigated by laboratory analysis. RESULTS: Overall, 101/815 (AR 12.4%) persons fell ill between 24 December 2008 and 3 February 2009. None were canteen employees. Most persons (n = 49) had disease onset during 7-9 January. Ill persons were a median of 22 years old, 92.9% were male. The response for the cohort study was 178/274 (72.1%). Of 27 cases (AR 15.2%), 25 had eaten at the canteen and 21 had consumed salad. Salad consumption on 6 January (aOR: 8.1; 95%CI: 1.5-45.4) and 7 January (aOR: 15.7; 95%CI: 2.2-74.1) were independently associated with increased risk of disease. Norovirus was detected in 8/28 ill persons' and 4/25 canteen employees' stools, 6/55 environmental swabs and 0/33 food items. Sequences were identical in environmental and stool samples (subtype II.4 2006b), except for those of canteen employees. Control measures comprised cohort isolation of symptomatic persons, exclusion of norovirus-positive canteen employees from work and disinfection of the canteen's kitchen. CONCLUSIONS: Our investigation indicated that consumption of norovirus-contaminated salad caused the peak of the outbreak on 7-9 January. Strict personal hygiene and proper disinfection of environmental surfaces remain crucial to prevent norovirus transmission.
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spelling pubmed-28310232010-03-03 Food-borne norovirus-outbreak at a military base, Germany, 2009 Wadl, Maria Scherer, Kathrin Nielsen, Stine Diedrich, Sabine Ellerbroek, Lüppo Frank, Christina Gatzer, Renate Hoehne, Marina Johne, Reimar Klein, Günter Koch, Judith Schulenburg, Jörg Thielbein, Uta Stark, Klaus Bernard, Helen BMC Infect Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Norovirus is often transmitted from person-to-person. Transmission may also be food-borne, but only few norovirus outbreak investigations have identified food items as likely vehicles of norovirus transmission through an analytical epidemiological study. During 7-9 January, 2009, 36 persons at a military base in Germany fell ill with acute gastroenteritis. Food from the military base's canteen was suspected as vehicle of infection, norovirus as the pathogen causing the illnesses. An investigation was initiated to describe the outbreak's extent, to verify the pathogen, and to identify modes of transmission and source of infection to prevent further cases. METHODS: For descriptive analysis, ill persons were defined as members of the military base with acute onset of diarrhoea or vomiting between 24 December 2008, and 3 February 2009, without detection of a pathogen other than norovirus in stools. We conducted a retrospective cohort study within the headquarters company. Cases were military base members with onset of diarrhoea or vomiting during 5-9 January. We collected information on demographics, food items eaten at the canteen and contact to ill persons or vomit, using a self-administered questionnaire. We compared attack rates (AR) in exposed and unexposed persons, using bivariable and multivariable logistic regression modelling. Stool specimens of ill persons and canteen employees, canteen food served during 5-7 January and environmental swabs were investigated by laboratory analysis. RESULTS: Overall, 101/815 (AR 12.4%) persons fell ill between 24 December 2008 and 3 February 2009. None were canteen employees. Most persons (n = 49) had disease onset during 7-9 January. Ill persons were a median of 22 years old, 92.9% were male. The response for the cohort study was 178/274 (72.1%). Of 27 cases (AR 15.2%), 25 had eaten at the canteen and 21 had consumed salad. Salad consumption on 6 January (aOR: 8.1; 95%CI: 1.5-45.4) and 7 January (aOR: 15.7; 95%CI: 2.2-74.1) were independently associated with increased risk of disease. Norovirus was detected in 8/28 ill persons' and 4/25 canteen employees' stools, 6/55 environmental swabs and 0/33 food items. Sequences were identical in environmental and stool samples (subtype II.4 2006b), except for those of canteen employees. Control measures comprised cohort isolation of symptomatic persons, exclusion of norovirus-positive canteen employees from work and disinfection of the canteen's kitchen. CONCLUSIONS: Our investigation indicated that consumption of norovirus-contaminated salad caused the peak of the outbreak on 7-9 January. Strict personal hygiene and proper disinfection of environmental surfaces remain crucial to prevent norovirus transmission. BioMed Central 2010-02-17 /pmc/articles/PMC2831023/ /pubmed/20163705 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-10-30 Text en Copyright ©2010 Wadl et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wadl, Maria
Scherer, Kathrin
Nielsen, Stine
Diedrich, Sabine
Ellerbroek, Lüppo
Frank, Christina
Gatzer, Renate
Hoehne, Marina
Johne, Reimar
Klein, Günter
Koch, Judith
Schulenburg, Jörg
Thielbein, Uta
Stark, Klaus
Bernard, Helen
Food-borne norovirus-outbreak at a military base, Germany, 2009
title Food-borne norovirus-outbreak at a military base, Germany, 2009
title_full Food-borne norovirus-outbreak at a military base, Germany, 2009
title_fullStr Food-borne norovirus-outbreak at a military base, Germany, 2009
title_full_unstemmed Food-borne norovirus-outbreak at a military base, Germany, 2009
title_short Food-borne norovirus-outbreak at a military base, Germany, 2009
title_sort food-borne norovirus-outbreak at a military base, germany, 2009
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2831023/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20163705
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-10-30
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