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Syndromic Surveillance for Local Outbreaks of Lower-Respiratory Infections: Would It Work?

BACKGROUND: Although syndromic surveillance is increasingly used to detect unusual illness, there is a debate whether it is useful for detecting local outbreaks. We evaluated whether syndromic surveillance detects local outbreaks of lower-respiratory infections (LRIs) without swamping true signals b...

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Autores principales: van den Wijngaard, Cees C., van Asten, Liselotte, van Pelt, Wilfrid, Doornbos, Gerda, Nagelkerke, Nico J. D., Donker, Gé A., van der Hoek, Wim, Koopmans, Marion P. G.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2861591/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20454449
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010406
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author van den Wijngaard, Cees C.
van Asten, Liselotte
van Pelt, Wilfrid
Doornbos, Gerda
Nagelkerke, Nico J. D.
Donker, Gé A.
van der Hoek, Wim
Koopmans, Marion P. G.
author_facet van den Wijngaard, Cees C.
van Asten, Liselotte
van Pelt, Wilfrid
Doornbos, Gerda
Nagelkerke, Nico J. D.
Donker, Gé A.
van der Hoek, Wim
Koopmans, Marion P. G.
author_sort van den Wijngaard, Cees C.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Although syndromic surveillance is increasingly used to detect unusual illness, there is a debate whether it is useful for detecting local outbreaks. We evaluated whether syndromic surveillance detects local outbreaks of lower-respiratory infections (LRIs) without swamping true signals by false alarms. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Using retrospective hospitalization data, we simulated prospective surveillance for LRI-elevations. Between 1999–2006, a total of 290762 LRIs were included by date of hospitalization and patients place of residence (>80% coverage, 16 million population). Two large outbreaks of Legionnaires disease in the Netherlands were used as positive controls to test whether these outbreaks could have been detected as local LRI elevations. We used a space-time permutation scan statistic to detect LRI clusters. We evaluated how many LRI-clusters were detected in 1999–2006 and assessed likely causes for the cluster-signals by looking for significantly higher proportions of specific hospital discharge diagnoses (e.g. Legionnaires disease) and overlap with regional influenza elevations. We also evaluated whether the number of space-time signals can be reduced by restricting the scan statistic in space or time. In 1999–2006 the scan-statistic detected 35 local LRI clusters, representing on average 5 clusters per year. The known Legionnaires' disease outbreaks in 1999 and 2006 were detected as LRI-clusters, since cluster-signals were generated with an increased proportion of Legionnaires disease patients (p:<0.0001). 21 other clusters coincided with local influenza and/or respiratory syncytial virus activity, and 1 cluster appeared to be a data artifact. For 11 clusters no likely cause was defined, some possibly representing as yet undetected LRI-outbreaks. With restrictions on time and spatial windows the scan statistic still detected the Legionnaires' disease outbreaks, without loss of timeliness and with less signals generated in time (up to 42% decline). CONCLUSIONS: To our knowledge this is the first study that systematically evaluates the performance of space-time syndromic surveillance with nationwide high coverage data over a longer period. The results show that syndromic surveillance can detect local LRI-outbreaks in a timely manner, independent of laboratory-based outbreak detection. Furthermore, since comparatively few new clusters per year were observed that would prompt investigation, syndromic hospital-surveillance could be a valuable tool for detection of local LRI-outbreaks.
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spelling pubmed-28615912010-05-07 Syndromic Surveillance for Local Outbreaks of Lower-Respiratory Infections: Would It Work? van den Wijngaard, Cees C. van Asten, Liselotte van Pelt, Wilfrid Doornbos, Gerda Nagelkerke, Nico J. D. Donker, Gé A. van der Hoek, Wim Koopmans, Marion P. G. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Although syndromic surveillance is increasingly used to detect unusual illness, there is a debate whether it is useful for detecting local outbreaks. We evaluated whether syndromic surveillance detects local outbreaks of lower-respiratory infections (LRIs) without swamping true signals by false alarms. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Using retrospective hospitalization data, we simulated prospective surveillance for LRI-elevations. Between 1999–2006, a total of 290762 LRIs were included by date of hospitalization and patients place of residence (>80% coverage, 16 million population). Two large outbreaks of Legionnaires disease in the Netherlands were used as positive controls to test whether these outbreaks could have been detected as local LRI elevations. We used a space-time permutation scan statistic to detect LRI clusters. We evaluated how many LRI-clusters were detected in 1999–2006 and assessed likely causes for the cluster-signals by looking for significantly higher proportions of specific hospital discharge diagnoses (e.g. Legionnaires disease) and overlap with regional influenza elevations. We also evaluated whether the number of space-time signals can be reduced by restricting the scan statistic in space or time. In 1999–2006 the scan-statistic detected 35 local LRI clusters, representing on average 5 clusters per year. The known Legionnaires' disease outbreaks in 1999 and 2006 were detected as LRI-clusters, since cluster-signals were generated with an increased proportion of Legionnaires disease patients (p:<0.0001). 21 other clusters coincided with local influenza and/or respiratory syncytial virus activity, and 1 cluster appeared to be a data artifact. For 11 clusters no likely cause was defined, some possibly representing as yet undetected LRI-outbreaks. With restrictions on time and spatial windows the scan statistic still detected the Legionnaires' disease outbreaks, without loss of timeliness and with less signals generated in time (up to 42% decline). CONCLUSIONS: To our knowledge this is the first study that systematically evaluates the performance of space-time syndromic surveillance with nationwide high coverage data over a longer period. The results show that syndromic surveillance can detect local LRI-outbreaks in a timely manner, independent of laboratory-based outbreak detection. Furthermore, since comparatively few new clusters per year were observed that would prompt investigation, syndromic hospital-surveillance could be a valuable tool for detection of local LRI-outbreaks. Public Library of Science 2010-04-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2861591/ /pubmed/20454449 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010406 Text en van den Wijngaard et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
van den Wijngaard, Cees C.
van Asten, Liselotte
van Pelt, Wilfrid
Doornbos, Gerda
Nagelkerke, Nico J. D.
Donker, Gé A.
van der Hoek, Wim
Koopmans, Marion P. G.
Syndromic Surveillance for Local Outbreaks of Lower-Respiratory Infections: Would It Work?
title Syndromic Surveillance for Local Outbreaks of Lower-Respiratory Infections: Would It Work?
title_full Syndromic Surveillance for Local Outbreaks of Lower-Respiratory Infections: Would It Work?
title_fullStr Syndromic Surveillance for Local Outbreaks of Lower-Respiratory Infections: Would It Work?
title_full_unstemmed Syndromic Surveillance for Local Outbreaks of Lower-Respiratory Infections: Would It Work?
title_short Syndromic Surveillance for Local Outbreaks of Lower-Respiratory Infections: Would It Work?
title_sort syndromic surveillance for local outbreaks of lower-respiratory infections: would it work?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2861591/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20454449
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010406
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