Literature DB >> 23466436

Notes from the field: Outbreak of infections caused by Shigella sonnei with decreased susceptibility to azithromycin--Los Angeles, California, 2012.

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Abstract

In May 2012, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health's Acute Communicable Disease Control Unit and Environmental Health, Food, and Milk Program investigated an outbreak of shigellosis associated with a private bridge club. This investigation documented the first known transmission of Shigella sonnei with decreased susceptibility to azithromycin in the United States.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23466436      PMCID: PMC4604789     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep        ISSN: 0149-2195            Impact factor:   17.586


In May 2012, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health’s Acute Communicable Disease Control Unit and Environmental Health, Food, and Milk Program investigated an outbreak of shigellosis associated with a private bridge club. This investigation documented the first known transmission of Shigella sonnei with decreased susceptibility to azithromycin in the United States. Cases were defined as an illness clinically compatible with shigellosis in a patient or S. sonnei isolated from stool of a person with an epidemiologic link to the bridge club during May 22–26, 2012. Investigators attempted to interview all bridge club workers and members who had visited the bridge club during the week of May 22; they collected stool specimens from workers who handled food and from workers and members with diarrhea who had not already submitted a stool specimen for culture at a health facility. Thirty-nine cases were identified among club members with diarrhea and four among club workers; of the four workers, two, including one who handled food, reported no symptoms. The average age of affected persons was 75.3 years (range: 54–98 years); 55% were female. Among those with symptoms, the duration of illness averaged 5.9 days (range: 1–14 days). Common symptoms included diarrhea in 95% of patients, abdominal cramps in 70%, and fever in 56%. Thirty-one (72%) persons sought medical care, and 10 (23%) were hospitalized. No specific exposures implicated a source for the outbreak. Among the 43 cases, 14 were culture-confirmed; 10 isolates underwent pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), yielding indistinguishable patterns. Four isolates submitted to CDC’s National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS) displayed resistance to streptomycin, sulfisoxazole, tetracycline, and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. Unlike most Shigella isolates tested by NARMS, these isolates also showed elevated azithromycin minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of >16 μg/mL (1) and harbored a plasmid-encoded macrolide resistance gene, mphA (2). CDC’s PulseNet identified two additional isolates indistinguishable from the outbreak PFGE pattern. One was from a man in Pennsylvania aged 23 years who had visited Los Angeles in April, and the other from a man in Hawaii aged 53 years who visited Los Angeles during April and May; both men were hospitalized with diarrhea. Neither case was epidemiologically linked to the bridge club or to each other. Although sporadic cases of shigellosis caused by Shigella strains with increased azithromycin MICs have occurred, this is the first outbreak documented in the United States and might indicate increasing circulation of such strains (1). Illnesses in this outbreak tended to be severe; however, the affected population was much older than the general U.S. population. Clinical management of such illnesses is likely to be complex; although azithromycin currently is recommended for treatment of infections caused by multidrug-resistant Shigella, options for alternative treatment among children with such infections primarily include parenteral antimicrobial medications (3,4). Guidelines for azithromycin susceptibility testing and criteria for interpretation of MICs for Shigella species have not been published. Clinicians are urged to report azithromycin treatment failure among shigellosis patients to public health authorities and to retain Shigella isolates from such cases for further analysis.
  2 in total

1.  Reduced azithromycin susceptibility in Shigella sonnei, United States.

Authors:  Rebecca Leigh Howie; Jason P Folster; Anna Bowen; Ezra J Barzilay; Jean M Whichard
Journal:  Microb Drug Resist       Date:  2010-07-12       Impact factor: 3.431

2.  Outbreak of infections caused by Shigella sonnei with reduced susceptibility to azithromycin in the United States.

Authors:  Maria Sjölund Karlsson; Anna Bowen; Roshan Reporter; Jason P Folster; Julian E Grass; Rebecca L Howie; Julia Taylor; Jean M Whichard
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2012-12-28       Impact factor: 5.191

  2 in total
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Review 1.  Infectious diarrhea: an overview.

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2.  An update on vaccines against Shigella.

Authors:  Shai Ashkenazi; Dani Cohen
Journal:  Ther Adv Vaccines       Date:  2013-09

3.  Diarrhoea and smoking: an analysis of decades of observational data from Bangladesh.

Authors:  Sumon Kumar Das; Mohammod Jobayer Chisti; A M Shamsir Ahmed; Mohammad Abdul Malek; Shahnawaz Ahmed; K M Shahunja; Farzana Ferdous; Fahmida Dil Farzana; Jui Das; Aminur Rahman; Abdullah Al Mamun; Abu Syed Golam Faruque
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2015-07-12       Impact factor: 3.295

4.  Notes from the Field: Outbreaks of Shigella sonnei Infection with Decreased Susceptibility to Azithromycin Among Men Who Have Sex with Men - Chicago and Metropolitan Minneapolis-St. Paul, 2014.

Authors:  Anna Bowen; Dana Eikmeier; Pamela Talley; Alicia Siston; Shamika Smith; Jacqueline Hurd; Kirk Smith; Fe Leano; Amelia Bicknese; J Corbin Norton; Davina Campbell
Journal:  MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep       Date:  2015-06-05       Impact factor: 17.586

5.  Epidemiological characteristics of imported shigellosis in Korea, 2010-2011.

Authors:  Hee-Jung Kim; Seung-Ki Youn; Sangwon Lee; Yeon Hwa Choi
Journal:  Osong Public Health Res Perspect       Date:  2013-03-21

6.  Shigella spp. with reduced azithromycin susceptibility, Quebec, Canada, 2012-2013.

Authors:  Christiane Gaudreau; Sapha Barkati; Jean-Michel Leduc; Pierre A Pilon; Julie Favreau; Sadjia Bekal
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2014-05       Impact factor: 6.883

7.  Elevated Risk for Antimicrobial Drug-Resistant Shigella Infection among Men Who Have Sex with Men, United States, 2011-2015.

Authors:  Anna Bowen; Julian Grass; Amelia Bicknese; Davina Campbell; Jacqueline Hurd; Robert D Kirkcaldy
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2016-09       Impact factor: 6.883

8.  The changing epidemiology of bacillary dysentery and characteristics of antimicrobial resistance of Shigella isolated in China from 2004-2014.

Authors:  Zhaorui Chang; Jing Zhang; Lu Ran; Junling Sun; Fengfeng Liu; Li Luo; Lingjia Zeng; Liping Wang; Zhongjie Li; Hongjie Yu; Qiaohong Liao
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2016-11-18       Impact factor: 3.090

9.  High-Quality Draft Genome Sequences for Four Drug-Resistant or Outbreak-Associated Shigella sonnei Strains Generated with PacBio Sequencing and Whole-Genome Maps.

Authors:  Rebecca L Lindsey; Dhwani Batra; Lori Rowe; Vladimir N Loparev; Phalasy Juieng; Lisley Garcia-Toledo; Amelia Bicknese; Devon Stripling; Haley Martin; Jessica Chen; Nancy Strockbine; Eija Trees
Journal:  Genome Announc       Date:  2017-08-31
  9 in total

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