| Literature DB >> 29728977 |
Madelief Mollers1,2, Ingeborg L A Boxman3, Harry Vennema4, Ife A Slegers-Fitz-James5, Diederik Brandwagt6,7, Ingrid H Friesema7, Jenny S Batstra5, Margreet J M Te Wierik8.
Abstract
This study describes an outbreak investigation of 14 hepatitis A cases in the Netherlands. The hepatitis A virus (HAV) genotype IB sequences in cases were highly similar (459/460 nt). The origin of strains could be narrowed to Bulgaria based on information from EPIS-FWD. As an association with consumption of soft fruit was suspected, a case-control study was initiated using a questionnaire and a list of pictures of soft fruit available at the supermarket chain involved. Twelve out of 13 cases consumed a specific frozen raspberry/blueberry product shown on the list (OR 46.0, 95% CI 5.0-27). In multivariable regression analysis this product was the only risk factor (aOR 26.6, 95% CI 2.0-263). Laboratory analyses could not demonstrate HAV-RNA in batches that had been on the market in the incubation period of patients. Trace back of frozen fruit showed that raspberries had been traded by a producer in Bulgaria. After withdrawal of the product from the supermarket no new cases were reported. Use of advertisement pictures of consumed food was helpful in this investigation. Suspicion of the source was strengthened by data from molecular typing and food trace back activities, underlining the importance of good (inter)national cooperation between public health and food safety organisations.Entities:
Keywords: HAV; Outbreak; Raspberries; Soft fruit; Virus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29728977 PMCID: PMC6096949 DOI: 10.1007/s12560-018-9347-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Environ Virol ISSN: 1867-0334 Impact factor: 2.778
Fig. 1Timeline of the outbreak investigation on a possible food-borne hepatitis A outbreak with 14 cases in the Netherlands, 2017 (cases are shown by reporting date in contrast to Fig. 2 epicurve)
Fig. 2Epicurve of a hepatitis A outbreak related to frozen soft fruit with date of disease onset of cases between 30 March–30 May 2017, the Netherlands
Food items consumed within 6 weeks before onset of illness by hepatitis A cluster cases (n = 13) in comparison to controls (n = 29), the Netherlands, April–May 2017
| Cases ( | Controls ( | OR | 95% CI | aORa | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Questionnaire | ||||||
| Frozen mixed fruitb | 13 (100%) | 7 (24%) | 38.5c | (5.0–853) | d | |
| Frozen raspberries | 9 (69%) | 8 (26%) | 5.6 | (1.3–23.6) | NS | |
| Mixed fruit smoothieb | 4 (31%) | 1 (3%) | 12.4 | (1.2–126) | NS | |
| Image liste | ||||||
| Carton of frozen blueberries/raspberries | 12 (92%) | 6 (21%) | 46.0 | (5.0–427) | 26.6 | (2.0–263) |
| Carton of frozen fruitsf | 9 (69%) | 3 (10%) | 19.5 | (3.6–104) | NS | |
| Bag of frozen fruitsf | 5 (38%) | 2 (7%) | 8.4 | (1.4–52.1) | NS |
NS not significant
aaOR = adjusted OR obtained from the multivariable model
bAny fruit
cThe OR was calculated by hand by adding 1 extra person to each cell in a 2 × 2 table, because all cases had consumed this product
dNot possible to calculate
eResults for one case are missing
fRaspberries, blueberries, blackberries, strawberries, cherries and red currants