| Literature DB >> 29125835 |
Simone Lanini1, Claudia Minosse1, Francesco Vairo1, Annarosa Garbuglia1, Virginia Di Bari1, Alessandro Agresta1, Giovanni Rezza2, Vincenzo Puro1, Alessio Pendenza3, Maria Rosaria Loffredo4, Paola Scognamiglio1, Alimuddin Zumla5, Vincenzo Panella6, Giuseppe Ippolito1, Maria Rosaria Capobianchi1.
Abstract
The hepatitis A virus (HAV) is mainly transmitted through the faecal-oral route. In industrialized countries HAV infection generally occurs as either sporadic cases in travelers from endemic areas, local outbreak within closed/semi-closed population and as foodborne community outbreak. Recently, an increasing number of HAV infection clusters have been reported among young men-who-have-sex-with-men (MSM). The Lazio Regional Service for the epidemiology and control for infectious diseases (SeRESMI) has noticed an increase of acute hepatitis A (AHA) since September 2016. Temporal analysis carried out with a discrete Poisson model using surveillance data between January 2016 and March 2017 evidenced an ongoing outbreak of AHA that started at the end of August. Molecular investigation carried out on 130 out of 513 cases AHA reported until March 2017 suggests that this outbreak is mainly supported by an HAV variant which is currently spreading within MSM communities across Europe (VRD_521_2016). The report confirms that AHA is an emerging issue among MSM. In addition through the integration of standard (case based) surveillance with molecular investigation we could discriminate, temporally concomitant but epidemiologically unrelated, clusters due to different HAV variants. As suggested by the WHO, in countries with low HAV circulation, vaccination programmes should be tailored on the local epidemiological patterns to prevent outbreaks among high risk groups and eventual spillover of the infection in the general population.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29125835 PMCID: PMC5695276 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0185428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Incidence of AHA cases.
A) Incidence of the AHA cases occurred among people resident in Lazio, according to area of residence (i.e. Frosione (FR) 17 cases; Latina (LT) 13 cases; Rieti (RI) 6 cases; Metropolitan area of Rome (RM) 61 cases; City of Rome (ROMA) 377 cases; Viterbo (VT) 12 cases; total cases: 486). Cases occurred in non-resident people (N = 27) were not included. B B) Temporal distribution of the 513 cases of AHA occurred in Lazio between 1 January 2016 and 31 March 2017, according to risk class, i.e. men (N = 449); women (N = 32); children (N = 32).
Temporal cluster analysis.
| Time window | 01/01/2016-31/03/2017 | ||
| Resident population | 2,341,883 | 2,580,432 | 966,157 |
| Number of cases | 449 | 32 | 32 |
| Annual rate per 100.000 inhabitants | 15.4 | 1.0 | 2.7 |
| Cluster duration | Nov 2016 to Mar 2017 | Dec 2016 to Mar 2017 | Aug 2016 to Nov 2016 |
| P-value | 0.001 | 0.001 | 0.001 |
| Observed cases | 411 | 24 | 21 |
| Expected cases | 148.68 | 8.49 | 8.56 |
| Annual rate per 100.000 inhabitants | 42.5 | 2.8 | 6.5 |
| Expected/Observed ratio | 2.76 | 2.83 | 2.45 |
| Relative Risk | 21.85 | 8.31 | 5.23 |
Fig 2Phylogenetic analysis.
Phylogenetic tree, built with a total of 174 460nt-long sequences encompassing the VP1/2A junction region of HAV genome, based on the maximum-likelihood method with the Hasegawa-Kishino-Yano model + G. All the sequences obtained in 2016–2017 from Lazio region (N = 130, patient number, in red) are included. In addition, HAV sequences from Lazio cases referred to the Laboratory from 2013–2015 (N = 24, patient number, in black) are included. The tree also includes 16 reference sequences from GenBank (genotype IA: X75215; EU131373; AB020565; X83302; genotype IB: M14707; DQ646426; NC001489; AF314208; genotype IIA: AJ644676; genotype IIB: AY644670; genotype IIIA: AJ299464; DQ991030; AB279733; genotype IIIB: AB279735; AB425339; AB258387, in blue), and the 4 sequences (VRD_521_2016 and RIVM-HAV16-90, RIVM-HAV16-69 and V16_25801, in green) recently reported to be associated with epidemic clusters among MSM in other European countries (in blue). One genotype IIA sequence (AY644676) was used as the outgroup. The bar represents the genetic distance (substitution per nucleotide position). Bootstrap analysis with 1000 replicates was performed to assess the significance of the nodes; values greater than 80.
Fig 3Geographical distribution of HAV isolates.
The figure describes the distribution in Lazio of the 125 HAV isolates according to the 5 clusters (i.e.: Cluster A N = 112 -red, cluster B N = 6 -green, cluster C N = 3 -blue, cluster D N = 3 -orange, cluster E N = 1 -yellow). The figure did not include the 5 sporadic HAV isolates.