| Literature DB >> 25340705 |
Martyn Kirk, Laura Ford, Kathryn Glass, Gillian Hall.
Abstract
Foodborne disease is a major public health problem worldwide. To examine changes in foodborne illness in Australia, we estimated the incidence, hospitalizations, and deaths attributed to contaminated food circa 2010 and recalculated estimates from circa 2000. Approximately 25% of gastroenteritis cases were caused by contaminated food; to account for uncertainty we used simulation techniques to estimate 90% credible intervals. We estimate that circa 2010, 4.1 million foodborne gastroenteritis cases occurred, and circa 2000, 4.3 million cases occurred. Circa 2010, contaminated food was estimated to be responsible for 30,840 gastroenteritis-associated hospitalizations, 76 associated deaths, and 5,140 nongastrointestinal illnesses. Cases of salmonellosis and campylobacteriosis increased from 2000 to 2010 and were the leading causes of gastroenteritis-associated hospitalizations; Listeria monocytogenes and nontyphoidal Salmonella spp. infections were the leading causes of death. Although the overall incidence of foodborne illnesses declined over time in Australia, cases of foodborne gastroenteritis are still common.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25340705 PMCID: PMC4214288 DOI: 10.3201/eid2011.131315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Estimated number of gastroenteritis cases caused by domestically acquired pathogens, Australia, circa 2010*
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|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Bacterium | |||
|
| 3,350 (900–10,100) | 100 (98–100) | 3,350 (900–10,100) |
|
| 234,000 (147,000–374,000) | 77 (62–89) | 179,000 (108,500–290,000) |
|
| 16,500 (2,600–53,400) | 98 (86–100) | 16,100 (2,550–50,600) |
| STEC | 4,300 (2,050–9,500) | 56 (32–83) | 2,350 (950–5,850) |
| Other pathogenic | 1,100,000 (833,000–1,450,000) | 23 (8–55) | 255,000 (85,800–632,000) |
|
| 56,200 (31,900–101,000) | 72 (53–86) | 39,600 (21,200–73,400) |
|
| 20 (8–45) | 75 (2–97) | 15 (5–30) |
|
| 3,000 (1,650–5,400) | 12 (5–23) | 350 (150–850) |
|
| 1,300 (200–7,050) | 100 (95–100) | 1,300 (200–7,000) |
|
| 60 (15–170) | 75 (5–96) | 40 (10–120) |
|
| 1,500 (900–2,500) | 84 (28–94) | 1,150 (650–1,950) |
| Virus | |||
| Adenovirus | 88,400 (28,800–205,000) | 2 (1–3) | 1,650 (500–4,650) |
| Astrovirus | 67,100 (20,900–155,000) | 2 (1–3) | 1,300 (350–3,400) |
| Norovirus | 1,550,000 (1,220,000–1,940,000) | 18 (5–35) | 276,000 (78,100–563,000) |
| Rotavirus | 44,800 (18,500–90,800) | 2 (1–3) | 850 (300–2,000) |
| Sapovirus | 81,600 (63,400–102,000) | 18 (5–35) | 15,000 (7,450–24,300) |
| Parasite | |||
|
| 17,900 (8,150–39,800) | 10 (1–27) | 1,700 (150–6,100) |
|
| 32,800 (19,800–56,400) | 6 (1–50) | 3,700 (800–10,600) |
| Subtotal | 3,090,000 (2,810,000–3,900,000) | 25 (13–42) | 798,000 (528,000–1,310,000) |
| Unknown etiology | 12,800,000 (10,500,000–14,500,000) | 25 (13–42) | 3,310,000 (1,800,000–5,152,000) |
| Total | 15,900,000 (13,700,000–18,000,000) | 25 (13–42) | 4,110,000 (2,330,000–6,390,000) |
*All estimates were based on an empirical distribution of the Australian population in the June quarter of 2006–2010; for the parameters of these distributions, see online Technical Appendix 4 (http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/20/11/13-1315-Techapp4.pdf). CrI, credible interval; E. coli, Escherichia coli; STEC, Shiga toxin–producing E. coli.
Estimated number of acute foodborne illness cases caused by domestically acquired pathogens and agents that do not result in gastroenteritis, Australia, circa 2010*
| Illness | % Foodborne, median (90% CrI) | No. illnesses, median (90% CrI) |
|---|---|---|
| Hepatitis A virus infection | 12 (5–24) | 40 (10–100) |
| Listeriosis | 98 (90–100) | 150 (50–200) |
| Toxoplasmosis | 31 (4–74) | 3,750 (1,400–7,150) |
| Ciguatera | 100 (100–100) | 150 (40–300) |
| Scombrotoxicosis | 100 (100–100) | 1,050 (0–2,450) |
| Total | 40 (25–59) | 5,140 (3,530–7,980) |
*All estimates were based on an empirical distribution of the Australian population in the June quarter of 2006–2010; for the parameters of these distributions, see online Technical Appendix 4 (http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/20/11/13-1315-Techapp4.pdf). CrI, credible interval.
Comparison of estimates of the annual number of cases and incidence rates for foodborne gastroenteritis and key foodborne pathogens, Australia, circa 2000 and circa 2010*
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|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. cases, median (90% CrI) | Rate per million population (90% CrI) | No. cases, median 90% (CrI) | Rate per million population (90% CrI) | |||
| Gastroenteritis | 4.3 million (2.2–7.3 million) | 224,000 (116,000–374,000) | 4.1 million (2.3–6.4 million) | 186,000 (105,000–289,000) | 0.83 (0.4–1.8) | |
| 139,000 (82,500–227,000) | 7,400 (4,500–12,200) | 179,000 (108,500–290,000) | 8,400 (5,050–13,650) | 1.13 (0.5–2.3) | ||
| 28,000 (15,000–50,000) | 1,500 (800–2,700) | 39,600 (21,200–73,400) | 1,850 (1,000–3,350) | 1.24 (0.5–2.8) | ||
| 9 (3–21) | 0.5 (0–1) | 15 (5–30) | 0.6 (0–1) | 1.2 (0.5–2.6) | ||
| 515 (175–1,300) | 28 (9–70) | 350 (150–850) | 16 (6–40) | 0.57 (0.2–2.3) | ||
| Hepatitis A virus | 245 (65–725) | 13 (3–40) | 40 (10–100) | 2 (1–5) | 0.15 (0.06–0.4) | |
|
| 125 (70–185) | 7 (4–10) | 150 (50–100) | 7 (3–10) | 1 (0.4–1.9) | |
|
| 2,600 (565–7,400) | 140 (30–405) | 3,700 (800–10,600) | 175 (35–490) | 1.25 (0.5–1.9) | |
*Estimates are based on an empirical distribution of the Australian population in the June quarter of 1996–2000 (circa 2000 estimates) and 2006–2010 (circa 2010 estimates); for the parameters of these distributions, see online Technical Appendix 4 (http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/20/11/13-1315-Techapp4.pdf). CrI, credible interval; RR, rate ratio.
Estimated annual number of hospitalizations and deaths resulting from domestically acquired foodborne pathogens, parasites, and diseases, Australia, circa 2010*
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|
| No. hospitalizations, median
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|---|---|---|---|
| Gastrointestinal illness, cause | |||
| Bacterium | |||
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| A05.4 | 25 (4–45) | 0 |
|
| A04.5 | 3,200 (2,100–4,500) | 3 (2–4) |
|
| A05.2 | 0 (0–2) | 1 (0–1) |
| STEC | A04.3 | 7 (2–15) | 0 |
|
| A04.0, A04.1, A04.4 | 20 (6–50) | 0 (0–1) |
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| A02.0-A02.9 | 2,100 (1,300–3,000) | 15 (8–20) |
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| A01.0 | 15 (6–35) | 0 |
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| A03 | 25 (9–50) | 0 |
|
| A05.0 | 10 (7–20) | 0 |
|
| A05.3 | 1 (0–1) | 0 |
|
| A04.6 | 35 (10–65) | 1 (0–1) |
| Virus | |||
| Adenovirus | A08.2 | 15 (8–25) | 0 |
| Astrovirus | NA | NA | NA |
| Norovirus | A08.1 | 150 (35–350) | 1 (0–2) |
| Rotavirus | A08.0 | 50 (30–100) | 0 (0–0) |
| Sapovirus | NA | NA | NA |
| Parasite | |||
|
| A07.2 | 40 (6–100) | 0 |
|
| A07.1 | 100 (25–300) | 0 |
| Subtotal |
| 5,900 (4,700–7,500) | 21 (14–26) |
| Unknown etiology | A08.4, A09, A09.0, A09.9 | 24,700 (22,600–27,800) | 39 (27–54) |
| Total |
| 30,600 (28,000–34,000) | 60 (53–63) |
| Nongastrointestinal illness | |||
| Hepatitis A | B15.9 | 20 (6–50) | 0 (0–2) |
| Listeriosis | A32 | 150 (100–250) | 15 (9–20) |
| Toxoplasmosis | B58 | 30 (10–60) | 1 (0–2) |
| Ciguatera | T61.0 | 25 (10–40) | 0 |
| Scombrotoxicosis | T61.1 | 8 (5–10) | 0 |
| Total | 240 (180–350) | 16 (10–21) |
*All estimates based on an empirical distribution of the Australian population in the June quarter of 2006–2010 for hospitalizations and 2001–2010 for death; see online Technical Appendix 3 (http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/20/11/13-1315-Techapp3.pdf) for the methods used to determine these estimates. CrI, credible interval; ICD-10-AM, Australian modification of the 10th International Classification of Diseases; NA, not applicable. E. coli, Escherichia coli; STEC, Shiga toxin–producing Escherichia coli