| Literature DB >> 31487898 |
Sonia Almeria1, Hediye N Cinar1, Jitender P Dubey2.
Abstract
Cyclospora cayetanensis is a coccidian parasite of humans, with a direct fecal-oral transmission cycle. It is globally distributed and an important cause of foodborne outbreaks of enteric disease in many developed countries, mostly associated with the consumption of contaminated fresh produce. Because oocysts are excreted unsporulated and need to sporulate in the environment, direct person-to-person transmission is unlikely. Infection by C. cayetanensis is remarkably seasonal worldwide, although it varies by geographical regions. Most susceptible populations are children, foreigners, and immunocompromised patients in endemic countries, while in industrialized countries, C. cayetanensis affects people of any age. The risk of infection in developed countries is associated with travel to endemic areas and the domestic consumption of contaminated food, mainly fresh produce imported from endemic regions. Water and soil contaminated with fecal matter may act as a vehicle of transmission for C. cayetanensis infection. The disease is self-limiting in most immunocompetent patients, but it may present as a severe, protracted or chronic diarrhea in some cases, and may colonize extra-intestinal organs in immunocompromised patients. Trimetoprim-sulfamethoxazole is the antibiotic of choice for the treatment of cyclosporiasis, but relapses may occur. Further research is needed to understand many unknown epidemiological aspects of this parasitic disease. Here, we summarize the biology, epidemiology, outbreaks, clinical symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, control and prevention of C. cayetanensis; additionally, we outline future research needs for this parasite.Entities:
Keywords: Cyclospora; control; diagnosis; epidemiology; humans; life cycle
Year: 2019 PMID: 31487898 PMCID: PMC6780905 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms7090317
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Figure 1Life cycle of Cyclospora cayetanensis. Caption: If a susceptible human ingests sporulated oocysts in contaminated food or water, the sporozoites inside the sporocysts excyst in the gut lumen and invade enterocytes of the epithelium of duodenum and jejunum where the sporozoites transform into trophozoites. Trophozoites subsequently form 2 types of schizonts (asexual multiplication). Type I schizonts contain 8–12 merozoites. Type II schizonts contain 4 merozoites. Then, type II merozoites form gamonts (sexual multiplication). There are two types of gamonts: microgamonts and macrogamonts. Microgamonts fertilize macrogamonts to form the zygote. Oocysts then are formed in enterocytes and are excreted unsporulated in the feces. The prepatent period is thought to be around one week. Unsporulated oocysts are not infectious—they need to sporulate to became infective for a host. Under laboratory conditions, at 22 °C and 30 °C, sporulation will take between 7 and 14 days to occur outside the host. A sporulated oocyst contains two sporocysts, each with two sporozoites.
Positive reports and surveillance studies of Cyclospora spp. and/or C. cayetanensis oocysts detection in fresh produce worldwide.
| Location | % (No. Positive/Total Samples Analyzed) | Food Type | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cambodia | 8.3 (3/36) | Water spinach | [ |
| Costa Rica | 8.0 (2/25) | Lettuce | [ |
| Canada | 1.7 (9/544) | Precut salads and leafy greens | [ |
| Canada | 0.5 (6/1171) | Arugula/baby arugula, baby spinach and spring mix | [ |
| Egypt | 16 (4/25) | Lettuce heads | [ |
| Egypt | 21.3 (64/300) | Rocket, lettuce, parsley, leek, green onion | [ |
| Egypt | 25.7 (9/35) | Fresh strawberry juice | [ |
| Ethiopia | 6.9 (25/360) | Vegetables and raw fruits (avocado, lettuce, cabbage, carrot, tomato, banana and mango) * | [ |
| Ghana | 5.1 (20/395) | Cabbage, green pepper, onion, tomato, lettuce | [ |
| Italy | 12.2 (6/49) | Fennel, cucumber, celery, tomato | [ |
| Italy | 1.3 (8/648) | Ready to eat-packaged salads | [ |
| Korea | 1.2 (5/404) | Winter grown cabbage, sprouts, blueberries, and cherry tomatoes | [ |
| Nepal | Number not indicated | Cabbage, lettuce, mustard leaves | [ |
| Nepal | Number not indicated | Lettuce, spinach, mustard and basil leaves | [ |
| Peru | Two surveys: 1.8 (2/110) and 1.6 (1/62) | Lettuce, mint, black mint | [ |
| Venezuela | 5.9% (6/102) | Lettuce | [ |
| Vietnam | 8.4 (24/287) | Herbs (basil, coriander sativum and coriander, Vietnamese mint, marjoram, persicaria) and lettuce | [ |
* Unclear which commodity was contaminated by Cyclospora spp.
Summary of outbreaks associated with C. cayetanensis by country and year of occurrence and possible sources of exposure.
| Country | Year | Disease Cases (If Laboratory Confirmed: Number of Cases) | Source of Exposure Suspected or Known | Origin/Notes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia (cruise) | 2010 | 266 (73) | Lettuce (suspected) | Two consecutive voyages | [ |
| Brazil | 1999–2002 | 132 (16) | Not indicated | Not available | [ |
| Canada (2 provinces) and USA (20 states) | 1996 | 1465 (978) | Raspberries | Guatemala | [ |
| Canada (Ontario) and USA (14 states) | 1997 | 1012 (422) | Raspberries | Guatemala | [ |
| Canada (Ontario) | 1998 | 315 | Raspberries | Guatemala | [ |
| Canada (Ontario) | 1999 | 104 | Dessert berries (blackberries suspected) | Blackberries (Guatemala), strawberries (USA), frozen raspberries (Chile) | [ |
| Canada (BC &) | 1999 | 15 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| Canada (BC) | 2001 | 30 (17) | Thai basil | Imported from Thailand (supplier in USA). Not confirmed | [ |
| Canada (BC) | 2003 | 11 | Cilantro | Undetermined, community | [ |
| Canada (BC) | 2004 | 17 (9) | Mango or basil (suspected) | Not confirmed, community | [ |
| Canada (BC) | 2004 | 8 | Cilantro suspected | Undetermined, community | [ |
| Canada (Quebec) | 2005 | 250 (142) | Fresh basil | Mexico, workers who ate in a restaurant | [ |
| Canada (Ontario) | 2005 | 44 (16) | Basil (suspected) | Retreat. Pasta salad with basil, origin not confirmed (shipment from Peru and Costa Rica) | [ |
| Canada (BC) | 2006 | 28 | Basil or garlic | Undetermined | [ |
| Canada (BC) | 2007 | 29 (14) | Organic basil | Mexico | [ |
| Canada (Sarnia) | 2010 | 210 | Basil, pesto | Fundraiser event | [ |
| Canada | 2013 | 25 | Leafy greens suspected | Undetermined | [ |
| Canada (multiple provinces) | 2015 | 97 | Undetermined, multistate (BC: 5, Alberta: 1, Ontario: 84, Quebec: 7) | Travelers from Mexico | [ |
| Canada (multiple provinces) | 2016 | 87 | Undetermined | BC:2, Alberta:2, Ontario 75, Quebec: 8 | [ |
| Canada (multiple provinces) | 2017 | 164 | Undetermined | BC (17), Ontario (143), Quebec (3) and Nova Scotia (1) | [ |
| Colombia | 2002 | 56 (31) | Salad, juices | University employees | [ |
| Germany | 2000 | 34 | Salad, green leafy herbs | France, Italy, Germany | [ |
| Nepal | 1989 | 535 (55) | Drinking water suspected | Foreigners, Travelers from UK | [ |
| Nepal | 1989 | 14 (12) | Drinking water suspected | Foreigners | [ |
| Nepal | 1992 | 964 (108) | Drinking water suspected | Foreigners | [ |
| Mexico | 2001 | 97 (55/70 fecal samples analyzed) | Watercress (salad berros) | Party attendees at wedding and christening | [ |
| Peru | 2004 | 127/274 people with diarrhea, 24/77 positive by microscopy | Undetermined (salsa sauces suspected) | Recruits | [ |
| Peru | 2005 | 52 recruits (37 positive, 15 control) 20/35 positive by PCR | Undetermined | Recruits | [ |
| Poland | 2013 | 3 | Drinking water suspected | Travelers from Indonesia | [ |
| Spain | 2003 | 13 (7) | Raspberry juice suspected | Travelers from Guatemala | [ |
| Sweden | 2009 | 18 (12) | Snap peas | Guatemala | [ |
| The Netherlands | 2001 | 29 (14) | Could not investigate potential food | Dutch participants at a scientific meeting in Bogor, Indonesia | [ |
| Turkey | 2005 | 35 | Drinking water suspected | Undetermined | [ |
| Turkey | 2007 | 505 stools (14/17 positive by PCR) | Undetermined, suspected to be related to lack of rain and use of contaminated water | Unwashed green salad suspected | [ |
| United Kingdom | 2015 | 79 | Undetermined | Travelers from Mexico | [ |
| USA (Illinois) | 1990 | 21 | Tap water or food | Not completely clarified | [ |
| USA (Florida) | 1995 | 38 | Raspberries suspected, risk factor soil contact | (Guatemala as possible source) | [ |
| USA (New York) | 1995 | 32 | Fruit suspected | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Massachusetts) | 1996 | 57 (12) | Berries | Wedding, strawberries (California), blueberries (Florida), blackberries (Guatemala), raspberries (Guatemala/Chile) | [ |
| USA (Florida) | 1996 | 86 | Raspberries (suspected) | Guatemala | [ |
| USA (South Carolina) | 1996 | 38 | Raspberries | Guatemala | [ |
| USA (20 states) and Canada (2 provinces) | 1996 | 1465 (978) | Raspberries | Guatemala | [ |
| USA (Florida), | 1997 | 220 (including people in cruise ship that departed from Florida) | Mesclun | Peru or USA (If related to 12 cases from Florida above, then mesclun from Peru most probable source) | [ |
| USA (14 states) and Canada (Ontario) | 1997 | 1012 (422) | Raspberries | Guatemala | [ |
| USA (Northern Virginia, Washington DC-Baltimore metropolitan area) | 1997 | 341 (48) | Basil | Multiple possible sources, may be local contamination | [ |
| USA (Virginia) | 1997 | 21 | Fruit plate | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Georgia) | 1998 | 17 | Probable fruit salad | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Florida) | 1999 | 94 | Berries likely | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Missouri) | 1999 | 62 | Basil in chicken pasta and tomato basil salad | Mexico or USA, two events | [ |
| USA (Georgia) | 2000 | 19 | Raspberries and/or blackberries (suspected) | Suspected to be from Guatemala | [ |
| USA (Pennsylvania) | 2000 | 54 | Raspberry, wedding cake | Guatemala | [ |
| USA (Florida) | 2001 | 39 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (New York City) | 2001 | 3 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Vermont) | Dec 2001-Jan 2002 | 22 | Raspberry (likely) | Suspected to be from Chile | [ |
| USA (Massachusetts) | 2002 | 8 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (New York) | 2002 | 14 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Texas, Illinois) | 2004 | 95 (38 in Texas, 57 in Illinois) | Undetermined | Undetermined, basil likely | [ |
| USA (Tennessee) | 2004 | 12 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Pennsylvania) | 2004 | 96 | Snow peas | Guatemala | [ |
| USA (Florida) | 2005 | 582 | Basil, restaurants | Peru | [ |
| USA (South Carolina) | 2005 | 6 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Massachusetts) | 2005 | 74 | Two different outbreaks (58 and 16 cases) | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Connecticut) | 2005 | 30 | Basil suspected | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Minnesota) | 2006 | 14 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (New York) | 2006 | 20 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Georgia) | 2006 | 3 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Wisconsin) | 2008 | 4 | Sugar snap peas (likely) | Guatemala not confirmed | [ |
| USA (California) | 2008 | 45 | Raspberries and/or blackberries (likely) | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (District of Columbia) | 2009 | 34 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Connecticut) | 2009 | 8 | Blackberries and raspberries | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Florida) | 2011 | 12 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Georgia) | 2011 | 88* | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Texas) | 2012 | 16 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Iowa, Nebraska and neighboring states) | 2013 | 162 | Bagged salad mix | Mexico | [ |
| USA (Texas) | 2013 | 270 (38) | Cilantro | Mexico, multistate | [ |
| USA (Wisconsin) | 2013 | 8 | Berry salad | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Michigan) | 2014 | 14 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Iowa, Nebraska) | 2014 | 227 (161) | Lettuce (imported romaine lettuce) | Mexico | [ |
| USA (Texas) | 2014 | 304 (26) | Cilantro | Mexico | [ |
| USA (South Carolina) | 2014 | 13 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (31 states) | 2015 | 546 (90 cases in Georgia, Texas and Wisconsin) | Cilantro (suspected) | Mexico | [ |
| USA (Texas) | 2016 | 6 ** | Carrots or green cabbage in coleslaw (suspected) | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (40 states) | 2017 (summary) | 1065 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Florida) | 2017 | 6 | Berries (suspected) | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Texas) | 2017 | 38 *** | Scallions (i.e., green onions) | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Michigan) | 2017 | 29 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Tennessee) | 2017 | 4 ††† | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Connecticut) | 2017 | 3 | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Florida) | 2017 | 3 ‡‡‡ | Undetermined | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (33 states) | 2018 (summary) | 2299 total cases | Many cases not directly linked, rest indicated in a, b, c and d cases | [ | |
| USA (4 states) a | 2018 | 250 (250) | Vegetable trays with broccoli, cauliflower, carrots and dill dip | Bought in supermarkets. It was not possible to determine if an individual component of the vegetable trays was the likely vehicle of infection | [ |
| USA (15 states and New York) b | 2018 | 511 (511) | Romaine lettuce and carrot mix | Salads purchased from a fast restaurant chain | [ |
| USA (2 states) c | 2018 | 8 (8) | Basil | Undetermined | [ |
| USA (Midwest- 3 clusters) d | 2018 | 53 (53) | Cilantro | Mexican-style restaurants | [ |
| USA (30 states) & | 2019 | 1,696 (1,696) | Basil (205) | Mexico | [ |
In bold: Outbreaks in two countries at the same time. & British Columbia. * An additional 10 probable cases associated with this outbreak according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (2017), were not included in the total. ** An additional nine suspected cases were identified in persons associated with this outbreak but were not counted in the table because of reporting issues (e.g., insufficient case data) according to CDC (2017). *** An additional three probable cases were identified in persons associated with this outbreak but were not counted in the table because of reporting issues (e.g., insufficient case data). ††† An additional two probable cases were identified in persons associated with this outbreak but were not counted in the table because of reporting issues (e.g., insufficient case data). ‡‡‡ One additional probable case was identified in a person associated with this outbreak but was not counted in the table because of a reporting issue. In 2018, a, b, c and d show cases directly linked to specific food produce. & As of August 2019.
Water sources contaminated by Cyclospora spp. and/or C. cayetanensis in different countries.
| Country | Type of Water | Percentage (Positive/Total Analyzed) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cambodia | Water spinach | 8.3 (3/36) | [ |
| Egypt | Household water tanks in Alexandria | 9.0 (9/100) | [ |
| Egypt | Finished piped water, irrigation canals, shallow underground water and drain water | positive detection from 5 residential areas. Number not indicated | [ |
| Egypt | Treated potable water from tanks | 0.2 (2/840) | [ |
| Egypt | River Nile, water works, water pumps, water tank, pond and canals | 5.9 (20/336) | [ |
| Ghana | Sachet drinking water | 59.3 (16/27) | [ |
| Guatemala | Rivers | 6.7 (2/30) | [ |
| Guatemala | Drinking water sources | 41.7 (5/12) * | [ |
| Italy | Tap water | 30.0 (3/10) * | [ |
| Italy | Treated wastewater | 21.3 (20/94) * | [ |
| Italy | Well water | 6.2 (1/16) * | [ |
| Malaysia | (1) Drinking water treatment plants and (2) Recreational water (man-made lake) | (1) 8.3 (2/24) and (2) 16.7 (2/12) | [ |
| Nepal | Chlorinated water | presence of oocysts | [ |
| Nepal | Sewage contamination | 22.2 (4/18); 41.7 (5/12) | [ |
| Nepal | Irrigation water, pond water, tap water and tube wells water | 2 of 8 irrigation canals, 1 of 12 pond water samples (none in tap water or tube wells) | [ |
| Peru | Wastewater | 72.7 (8/11) | [ |
| Spain | DWTP a, WWTP b, rivers | 9.0 (20/223) | [ |
| Tunisia | Wastewater | 0.4 (1/232) * | [ |
| Turkey | (1) Streams and (2) drinking water | Total: 24.6 (56/228) | [ |
| USA | WWTP b (1) influent and (2) effluent | (1) 25.0 (6/24) | [ |
| Vietnam | Lakes and rivers | 63.6 (84/132) * | [ |
| Vietnam | Water samples from markets and farms | 12.6 (12 /95) | [ |
* PCR methods; a Drinking water treatment plants; b Wastewater treatment plants. Cyclospora spp. in references [69,72,126,161,183,189,192] and Cyclospora cayetanensis in references [15,58,76,135,182,184,185,186,187,188,190,191,192,193,194].
Figure 2Oocysts of Cyclospora cayetanensis. Caption: Cyclospora cayetanensis oocysts. (A,B), unstained, differential Interference contrast, (C) acid-fast stain, (D) hot-safranin stain, (E), ultraviolet fluorescence microscopy. Oocyst in B is sporulated. Bars in A-E = 5 µm. Images (C–E) were from public images from DPDx CDC.