| Literature DB >> 31479457 |
Tamar Grossman1, Shifra Ken-Dror2, Elsa Pavlotzky2, Julia Vainer1, Yael Glazer3, Orli Sagi4, Avi Peretz5,6, Vered Agmon1, Esther Marva1, Lea Valinsky1.
Abstract
Cryptosporidium is a protozoan parasite associated with gastrointestinal illness. In immune-compromised individuals, the infection may become life-threatening. Cryptosporidiosis is a mandatory-reported disease but little was known about its prevalence and associated morbidity in Israel. Currently, laboratory diagnosis is based on microscopy or copro-antigen tests and the disease is underreported. Molecular assays, which are more sensitive and specific, are now increasingly used for identification and screening. Here, the molecular epidemiology of cryptosporidiosis is explored for the first time. Samples from 33 patients infected during an outbreak of 146 laboratory confirmed cases that occurred in Haifa and Western Galilee in 2015 were genotyped, as well as samples from 36 patients sporadically infected during 2014-2018 in different regions. The results suggest that Cryptosporidium subtypes found in Israel are more similar to those reported in the neighboring countries Jordan and Egypt than in European countries. C. hominis was the predominant species in the center and the north of Israel, implicating human-to-human transmission. C. hominis IeA11G3T3 was the most prevalent subtype contributing to morbidity.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31479457 PMCID: PMC6721021 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0219977
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Reported Cryptosporidium cases in Israel and incidence rate 2001–2018.
Fig 2Diagnosis and molecular genotyping.
Fig 3Cryptosporidium cases in Haifa and West Galilee per month during 2015.
Fig 4Age distribution of Cryptosporidium cases in Haifa and West Galilee during 2015.
Fig 5The geographic distribution and genotypes of Cryptosporidium cases in Israel.
A. Residence of the 2015 outbreak patients (N = 146), ploted on Haifa and West Galilee geographic map. B. Residence of genotyped patients. Purple, identyfied at the HMO but not genotyped; Red, C. hominis IeA11G3T3; Green, C. hominis IbA6G3. Grey, C. hominis IdA16; Light Blue, C. hominis IbA10G2; Yellow, C. parvum IIdA20G; Orange, C. parvum IIaA15G2R1. Maps were generated using Microreact [31]; A dynamic version that includes the tested determinants can be found at Microreact https://microreact.org/project/1hgtRJKlg/4da49c44 and https://microreact.org/project/HD3sxQKDh/350ce02e for Fig 5A and Fig 5B, respectively.
Cryptosporidium subtypes.
| Species | Subtype | 2015 Outbreak cases | Sporadic cases | Comments | General distribution |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 23 | 24 | dominant | sporadic worldwide | ||
| 10 | ─ | outbreak only | Egypt, Jordan, Australia; rarely reported | ||
| ─ | 1 | prevalent worldwide, dominant in Europe | |||
| ─ | 7 | Australia, India and China, sporadic | |||
| ─ | 2 | prevalent worldwide | |||
| ─ | 2 | prevalent in Egypt |
Fig 6Cryptosporidium cases per month in Haifa and West Galilee HMO 2003–2018.
The number of cases per month in the years 2003–2018 are shown (national database).