| Literature DB >> 21192848 |
Elaine Scallan1, Robert M Hoekstra, Frederick J Angulo, Robert V Tauxe, Marc-Alain Widdowson, Sharon L Roy, Jeffery L Jones, Patricia M Griffin.
Abstract
Estimates of foodborne illness can be used to direct food safety policy and interventions. We used data from active and passive surveillance and other sources to estimate that each year 31 major pathogens acquired in the United States caused 9.4 million episodes of foodborne illness (90% credible interval [CrI] 6.6-12.7 million), 55,961 hospitalizations (90% CrI 39,534-75,741), and 1,351 deaths (90% CrI 712-2,268). Most (58%) illnesses were caused by norovirus, followed by nontyphoidal Salmonella spp. (11%), Clostridium perfringens (10%), and Campylobacter spp. (9%). Leading causes of hospitalization were nontyphoidal Salmonella spp. (35%), norovirus (26%), Campylobacter spp. (15%), and Toxoplasma gondii (8%). Leading causes of death were nontyphoidal Salmonella spp. (28%), T. gondii (24%), Listeria monocytogenes (19%), and norovirus (11%). These estimates cannot be compared with prior (1999) estimates to assess trends because different methods were used. Additional data and more refined methods can improve future estimates.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21192848 PMCID: PMC3375761 DOI: 10.3201/eid1701.p11101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Data sources used to estimate illnesses, hospitalizations, and deaths caused by 31 pathogens transmitted through food, United States*
| Data source | Data | Pathogen(s) or acute gastroenteritis | Geographic coverage | Time frame | Adjustments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| COVIS System† | Number of case-patient reports, proportion hospitalized, proportion who died | United States | 2000–2007 | Underreporting; underdiagnosis | |
| FoodNet | Number of laboratory-confirmed illnesses, proportion hospitalized, proportion who died | FoodNet sites‡ | 2005–2008 | Geographic coverage;§ underdiagnosis | |
| FDOSS | Number of foodborne outbreak-associated illnesses | United States | 2000–2007; ( | Underreporting; underdiagnosis | |
| Proportion hospitalized and proportion who died in foodborne outbreaks | United States | 2000–2007; ( | Underdiagnosis | ||
| FoodNet Population Survey | Rate of acute gastroenteritis | Average annual rate of acute gastroenteritis was derived by multiplying the average monthly prevalence by 12, where an episode of acute gastroenteritis was defined as diarrhea ( | FoodNet sites‡ | 2000–2001, 2002–2003, 2006–2007 | Percentage of acute gastroenteritis attributable to norovirus |
| Multiple-cause-of-death data from the National Vital Statistics System | Death rate | Acute gastroenteritis deaths were identified from the underlying or contributing cause of death classified by ICD-10 diagnostic codes A00.9–A08.5 (infectious gastroenteritis of known cause), A09 (diarrhea and gastroenteritis of presumed infectious origin), or K52.9 (noninfectious gastroenteritis and colitis, unspecified), excluding A04.7 (enterocolitis due to | United States | 2000–2006 | Percentage of acute gastroenteritis deaths attributable to norovirus |
| NAMCS, NHAMCS | Hospitalization rate | Acute gastroenteritis hospitalizations were identified from patient visits to clinical settings, including physician offices, hospital emergency and outpatient departments with a diagnosis of infectious enteritis [ICD-9-CM diagnostic codes 001–008 (infectious gastroenteritis of known cause), 009 (infectious gastroenteritis), 558.9 (other and unspecified noninfectious gastroenteritis and colitis), or 787.9 (other symptoms involving digestive system: diarrhea), excluding 008.45 ( | Nationally representative sample of US clinical settings | 2000–2006 | Weighted to give national estimates according to NCHS criteria; percentage of acute gastroenteritis hospitalizations (combined with NIS and NHDS) attributable to norovirus |
| Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) | Hospitalization rate | Acute gastroenteritis hospitalizations were identified from discharges with one of the first three listed diagnoses classified by ICD-9-CM diagnostic codes 001–008 (infectious gastroenteritis of known cause), 009 (infectious gastroenteritis), 558.9 (other and unspecified noninfectious gastroenteritis and colitis), or 787.9 (other symptoms involving digestive system: diarrhea), excluding 008.45 ( | Sample of discharge records from US hospitals | 2000–2006 | Weighted to give national estimates according to Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project criteria; Percentage of acute gastroenteritis (combined with NAMCS/NHAMCS and NHDS) hospitalizations attributable to norovirus;
underdiagnosis ( |
| Death rate | Sample of discharge records from US hospitals | 2000–2006 | Underdiagnosis | ||
| National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey | Seroprevalence |
| United States | 1999–2004 | Rate of infection over time and percent symptomatic |
| NHDS | Hospitalization rate | Acute gastroenteritis hospitalizations were identified from discharges with one of the first three listed diagnoses classified by ICD-9-CM diagnostic codes 001–008 (infectious gastroenteritis of known cause), 009 (infectious gastroenteritis), 558.9 (other and unspecified noninfectious gastroenteritis and colitis), or 787.9 (other symptoms involving digestive system: diarrhea), excluding 008.45 ( | Nationally representative sample of discharge records from US hospitals | 2000–2006 | Weighted to give national estimates according to NCHS criteria; percentage of acute gastroenteritis hospitalizations (combined with NAMCS/NHAMCS and NIS) attributable to norovirus |
| National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System | Number of case-patient reports | United States | 2000–2007 (2002–2007 for | Underreporting; underdiagnosis | |
| Hospitalization rate | Hepatitis A | United States | 2000–2007 | Underdiagnosis | |
| National Tuberculosis Surveillance System | Number of tuberculosis case-patient reports, proportion who died |
| United States | 2004–2007 | Percentage of tuberculosis cases attributable to |
| US Census | Resident population estimates | Astrovirus, rotavirus, sapovirus | United States | 2006 | 75% of children experience an episode of clinical illness by 5 years of age. |
*COVIS, Cholera and Other Vibrio Illness Surveillance; FoodNet, Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network; FDOSS, Foodborne Disease Outbreak Surveillance System; ICD-10, International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision; NAMCS, National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey; NHAMCS, National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey; ICD-9-CM, International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification; NCHS, National Center for Health Statistics; NIS, Nationwide Inpatient Sample; NHDS, National Hospital Discharge Survey. †Passive surveillance from COVIS was used in preference to active surveillance from FoodNet for Vibrio spp. because most illnesses are reported by Gulf Coast States (Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas) that are not included in the FoodNet surveillance area. ‡Beginning in 2000, there were 10 FoodNet sites. In 2008, the population of these sites was 45 million persons, 15% of the US population. §Incidence of laboratory-confirmed illnesses in FoodNet for 2005–2008 was applied to 2006 US Census population estimates. ¶Data from FDOSS on Streptococcus spp., group A, were included for 1996–2007 for illnesses and for 1981–2007 for hospitalizations and deaths because of a paucity of data (Technical Appendix 1, Technical Appendix 3). #Codes for other and unspecified noninfectious gastroenteritis and colitis were included because infectious illnesses of unknown etiology are sometimes coded as noninfectious. **G. intestinalis became nationally notifiable in 2002.
Modeling approaches used to estimate the total number of illnesses for different types of data, United States*
| Pathogens for which laboratory-confirmed illnesses were scaled up | Pathogens for which US population was scaled down | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Active surveillance data | Passive surveillance data | Outbreak surveillance data | |
|
| Astrovirus | ||
|
|
| Norovirus | |
|
|
| ETEC† | Rotavirus |
| STEC O157 | Hepatitis A virus |
| Sapovirus |
| STEC non-O157 |
|
| |
|
| |||
|
| |||
|
| |||
|
| |||
*ETEC, enterotoxigenic Escherichi coli; STEC, Shiga toxin–producing E. coli. †Numbers of E. coli other than STEC or ETEC assumed to be same as for ETEC. ‡Includes all serotypes other than Typhi.
Estimated annual number of episodes of domestically acquired foodborne illnesses caused by 31 pathogens, United States*
| Pathogen | Laboratory confirmed | Multipliers | Travel related, % | Foodborne, %† | Domestically acquired foodborne, mean (90% credible interval) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Under-reporting | Under-diagnosis | |||||
| Bacteria | ||||||
|
| 85‡ | 25.5 | 29.3 | <1 | 100 | 63,400 (15,719–147,354) |
|
| 120§ | 1.1 | 15.2 | 16 | 50 | 839 (533–1,262) |
|
| 43,696¶ | 1.0 | 30.3 | 20 | 80 | 845,024 (337,031–1,611,083) |
|
| 25§ | 1.1 | 2.0 | <1 | 100 | 55 (34–91) |
|
| 1,295‡ | 25.5 | 29.3 | <1 | 100 | 965,958 (192,316–2,483,309) |
| STEC O157 | 3,704¶ | 1.0 | 26.1 | 4 | 68 | 63,153 (17,587–149,631) |
| STEC non-O157 | 1,579¶ | 1.0 | 106.8 | 18 | 82 | 112,752 (11,467–287,321) |
| ETEC, foodborne | 53‡ | 25.5 | 29.3 | 55 | 100 | 17,894 (24–46,212) |
| Diarrheagenic | 53 | 25.5 | 29.3 | <1 | 30 | 11,982 (16–30,913) |
|
| 808¶ | 1.0 | 2.1 | 3 | 99 | 1,591 (557–3,161) |
|
| 195¶ | 1.0 | 1.1 | 70 | 95 | 60 (46–74) |
|
| 41,930¶ | 1.0 | 29.3 | 11 | 94 | 1,027,561 (644,786–1,679,667) |
|
| 433¶ | 1.0 | 13.3 | 67 | 96 | 1,821 (87–5,522) |
|
| 14,864¶ | 1.0 | 33.3 | 15 | 31 | 131,254 (24,511–374,789) |
|
| 323‡ | 25.5 | 29.3 | <1 | 100 | 241,148 (72,341–529,417) |
|
| 15‡ | 25.5 | 29.3 | <1 | 100 | 11,217 (15–77,875) |
|
| 8§ | 1.1 | 33.1 | 70 | 100 | 84 (19–213) |
|
| 111§ | 1.1 | 1.7 | 2 | 47 | 96 (60–139) |
|
| 287§ | 1.1 | 142.4 | 10 | 86 | 34,664 (18,260–58,027) |
|
| 220§ | 1.1 | 142.7 | 11 | 57 | 17,564 (10,848–26,475) |
|
| 950¶ | 1.0 | 122.8 | 7 | 90 | 97,656 (30,388–172,734) |
| Subtotal |
|
|
|
|
| 3,645,773 (2,321,468–5,581,290) |
| Parasites | ||||||
|
| 7,594¶ | 1.0 | 98.6 | 9 | 8 | 57,616 (12,060–166,771) |
|
| 239¶ | 1.0 | 83.1 | 42 | 99 | 11,407 (137–37,673) |
|
| 20,305§ | 1.3 | 46.3 | 8 | 7 | 76,840 (51,148–109,739) |
|
| 1.0 | 0.0 | <1 | 50 | 86,686 (64,861–111,912) | |
|
| 13§ | 1.3 | 9.8 | 4 | 100 | 156 (42–341) |
| Subtotal |
|
|
|
|
| 232,705 (161,923–369,893) |
| Viruses | ||||||
| Astrovirus | NA | NA | NA | 0 | <1 | 15,433 (5,569–26,643) |
| Hepatitis A virus | 3,576§ | 1.1 | 9.1 | 41 | 7 | 1,566 (702–3,024) |
| Norovirus | NA | NA | NA | <1 | 26 | 5,461,731 (3,227,078–8,309,480) |
| Rotavirus | NA | NA | NA | 0 | <1 | 15,433 (5,569–26,643) |
| Sapovirus | NA | NA | NA | 0 | <1 | 15,433 (5,569–26,643) |
| Subtotal |
|
|
|
|
| 5,509,597 (3,273,623–8,355,568) |
| Total | 9,388,075 (6,641,440–12,745,709) | |||||
*All estimates based on US population in 2006. Modal or mean value shown unless otherwise stated; see Technical Appendix 3 for the parameters of these distributions. STEC, Shiga toxin–producing Escherichia coli; ETEC, enterotoxigenic E. coli; NA, not applicable. †Percentage foodborne among domestically acquired illnesses. ‡Passive surveillance data on outbreak-associated illnesses from the Foodborne Disease Outbreak Surveillance System. Estimates based on the number of foodborne illnesses ascertained in surveillance and therefore assumed to reflect only foodborne transmission. §Passive surveillance data from Cholera and Other Vibrio Illness Surveillance or the National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System. ¶Active surveillance data from Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network, adjusted for geographic coverage; data from the National Tuberculosis Surveillance System for M. bovis.
Estimated annual number of domestically acquired foodborne hospitalizations and deaths caused by 31 pathogens, United States*
| Pathogen | Hospitalization rate, %† | Hospitalizations, mean (90% credible interval) | Death rate, %† | Deaths, mean (90% credible interval) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bacteria | ||||
|
| 0.4 | 20 (0–85) | 0 | 0 |
|
| 55.0 | 55 (33–84) | 0.9 | 1 (0–2) |
|
| 17.1 | 8,463 (4,300–15,227) | 0.1 | 76 (0–332) |
|
| 82.6 | 42 (19–77) | 17.3 | 9 (0–51) |
|
| 0.6 | 438 (44–2,008) | <0.1 | 26 (0–163) |
| STEC O157 | 46.2 | 2,138 (549–4,614) | 0.5 | 20 (0–113) |
| STEC non-O157 | 12.8 | 271 (0–971) | 0.3 | 0 (0–0)§ |
| ETEC, foodborne | 0.8 | 12 (0–53) | 0 | 0 |
| Diarrheagenic | 0.8 | 8 (0–36) | 0 | 0 |
|
| 94.0 | 1,455 (521–3,018) | 15.9 | 255 (0–733) |
|
| 55.0 | 31 (21–42) | 4.7 | 3 (2–3) |
|
| 27.2 | 19,336 (8,545–37,490) | 0.5 | 378 (0–1,011) |
|
| 75.7 | 197 (0–583) | 0 | 0 |
|
| 20.2 | 1,456 (287–3,695) | 0.1 | 10 (0–67) |
|
| 6.4 | 1,064 (173–2,997) | <0.1 | 6 (0–48) |
|
| 0.2 | 1 (0–6) | 0 | 0 |
|
| 43.1 | 2 (0–5) | 0 | 0 |
|
| 91.3 | 93 (53–145) | 34.8 | 36 (19–57) |
|
| 22.5 | 100 (50–169) | 0.9 | 4 (0–17) |
|
| 37.1 | 83 (51–124) | 3.7 | 8 (3–19) |
|
| 34.4 | 533 (0–1,173) | 2.0 | 29 (0–173) |
| Subtotal |
| 35,796 (21,519–53,414) |
| 861 (260–1,761) |
| Parasites | ||||
|
| 25.0 | 210 (58–518) | 0.3 | 4 (0–19) |
|
| 6.5 | 11 (0–109) | 0.0 | 0 |
|
| 8.8 | 225 (141–325) | 0.1 | 2 (1–3) |
|
| 2.6 | 4,428 (2,634–6,674) | 0.2 | 327 (200–482) |
|
| 24.3 | 6 (0–17) | 0.2 | 0 (0–0) |
| Subtotal |
| 4,881 (3,060–7,146) |
| 333 (205–488) |
| Viruses | ||||
| Astrovirus | 0.4 | 87 (32–147) | <0.1 | 0 |
| Hepatitis A virus | 31.5 | 99 (42–193) | 2.4 | 7 (3–15) |
| Norovirus | 0.03 | 14,663 (8,097–23,323) | <0.1 | 149 (84–237) |
| Rotavirus | 1.7 | 348 (128–586) | <0.1 | 0 |
| Sapovirus | 0.4 | 87 (32–147) | <0.1 | 0 |
| Subtotal |
| 15,284 (8,719–23,962) |
| 157 (91–245) |
| Total | 55,961 (39,534–75,741) | 1,351 (712–2,268) |
*All estimates based on US population in 2006. STEC, Shiga toxin–producing Escherichia coli; ETEC, enterotoxigenic E. coli. †Unadjusted hospitalization and death rates are presented here. These rates were doubled to adjust for underdiagnosis before being applied to the number of laboratory-confirmed cases to estimate the total number of hospitalizations and deaths. The hospitalization and death rates for astrovirus, norovirus, rotavirus, and sapovirus presented here are the percentage of total estimated illness and were not subject to further adjustment. ‡Estimates based on the number of foodborne illnesses ascertained in surveillance, therefore assumed to reflect only foodborne transmission. §We report median values instead of means for the distributions of deaths caused by STEC non-O157 because of extremely skewed data.