| Literature DB >> 31496450 |
L Veneti1,2, H Lange1, L Brandal1, K Danis2,3, L Vold1.
Abstract
In 2016, we reviewed preventive control measures for secondary transmission of Shiga-toxin producing Escherichia coli (STEC) in humans in European Union (EU)/European Free Trade Association (EEA) countries to inform the revision of the respective Norwegian guidelines which at that time did not accommodate for the varying pathogenic potential of STEC. We interviewed public health experts from EU/EEA institutes, using a semi-structured questionnaire. We revised the Norwegian guidelines using a risk-based approach informed by the new scientific evidence on risk factors for HUS and the survey results. All 13 (42%) participating countries tested STEC for Shiga toxin (stx) 1, stx2 and eae (encoding intimin). Five countries differentiated their control measures based on clinical and/or microbiological case characteristics, but only Denmark based their measures on routinely conducted stx subtyping. In all countries, but Norway, clearance was obtained with ⩽3 negative STEC specimens. After this review, Norway revised the STEC guidelines and recommended only follow-up of cases infected with high-virulent STEC (determined by microbiological and clinical information); clearance is obtained with three negative specimens. Implementation of the revised Norwegian guidelines will lead to a decrease of STEC cases needing follow-up and clearance, and will reduce the burden of unnecessary public health measures and the socioeconomic impact on cases. This review of guidelines could assist other countries in adapting their STEC control measures.Entities:
Keywords: Control measures; Europe; HUS associated; STEC; Shiga toxin-producing E. coli
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31496450 PMCID: PMC6805742 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268819001614
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
General information about the last update of STEC national recommendations and harmonisation with sub-national level guidelines, EU/EEA countries, survey 2016
| Country | Last update | Reason of update | Differences in sub-national versus national level guidelines? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Austria | March 2016 | Request from public health medical doctors for clearer recommendations | No national guidelines available (local guidelines from Styria) |
| Belgium, Brussels and Flanders | 2015 | Routine procedure | No |
| Belgium, Wallonia | 2016 | After outbreak in a kindergarten | No |
| Denmark | Sept. 2015 | Laboratory methods have changed (virulence profiles associated with HUS) | No |
| Finland | 2007 | First version | No |
| France | 2015 | After HUS outbreak | No |
| Greece | 2011 | After E.coli outbreak in Germany | No |
| Ireland | 2013 | Routine procedure | No |
| The Netherlands | July 2016 | Notification criteria changed | No |
| Slovenia | 2016 | Raise awareness among risk groups | No |
| Spain | 2013 | Routine procedure | Unknown (recommendations at sub-national level may be more detailed) |
| Sweden | 2013 | Routine procedure | No national guidelines available |
| UK | 2016 | Routine procedure | No |
| Norway | 2013 | Routine procedure | No |
Laboratory methods for characterisation and verification of microbiological clearance of STEC available at the National Reference Laboratory in participant countries, EU/EEA survey 2016
| Country | Laboratory method for characterisation of STEC strains | Laboratory methods for verification of microbiological clearance | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCR | Serotyping | Immunoassay | WGS | Isolation | PCR ( | Immunoassay | ||||||
| Austria | R | R | R | NR | NR | R | NR | NR | NU | U | U | |
| Belgium | R | R | R | NR | NR | R | NA | NR | U | U | NU | |
| Denmark | R | R | R | R | R | R | NA (but VCA) | R | U | U | NU | |
| Finland | R | R | R | NR | NR | R | NA | R | U | U | NU | |
| France | R | R | R | R | R | R | NA | NR | U | U | NU | |
| Greece | R | R | R | R | R | R | R | NA | U | U | U | |
| Ireland | R | R | R | NR | NR | R | NA | NA | U | U | NU | |
| The Netherlands | R | R | R | NA | R only for | NA for ≠ | R | R | U | U | NU | NU |
| Slovenia | R | R | R | NR | NR | R | NA | NA | U | U | NU | |
| Spain | R | R | R | R | R | R | NR | NR | U | U | U | |
| Sweden | R | R | R | R | R | R | NA | R | U | U | NU | |
| UK | R | R | R | R | R | R | NA | R | U | U | NU | |
| Norway | R | R | R | R | R | R | NR | NR | U | U | NU | |
R, available and routinely used; NR, available, but not routinely used; NA, not available; U, used; NU, not used; VCA, vero cell assay.
This refers to the reference laboratory of Belgium. The same reference laboratory is operating for all three regions of Belgium (Wallonia, Brussels and Flanders)
Microbiological clearance required for cases that belong to categories of STEC cases A–F, countries that did not differentiate control measures (Group I), EU/EEA survey 2016
| Country | No. of negative control samples | Hours interval of laboratory sampling | Start sampling |
|---|---|---|---|
| Belgium, Brussels and Flanders | 2 | 48 | AS |
| Belgium, Wallonia | 2 | 24 | AS |
| Finland | 3 | 24–48 | AS and at least a week after 1st positive sample |
| France | 2 | 48 | AS |
| Greece | 2 | 24 | AS (If antibiotics, 48 h after the last dose of antibiotics) |
| The Netherlands | 2 | 48 | AS |
| Slovenia | 2 | 24 (48 if prolonged diarrhoea) | AS (If prolonged diarrhoea, 48 h AS) |
| Spain | 2 | 24 | AS (If antibiotics, 48 h after the last dose of antibiotics) |
| Sweden | 1 | − | AS |
(A) Positive for stx1 and eae with uncomplicated diarrhoea, (B) positive for stx1 and eae with bloody diarrhoea, (C) positive for stx2 and eae with uncomplicated diarrhoea, (D) positive for stx2 and eae with bloody diarrhoea, (E) developed HUS with positive laboratory test for STEC, (F) developed HUS with only clinical criteria.
AS: after symptoms of diarrhoea have ceased.
Microbiological clearance required for cases that belong to categories of STEC cases A–F, countries that differentiated control measures (Group II), EU/EEA survey 2016
| Category | Country | No. of negative control samples | Hours interval of laboratory sampling | Start sampling | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A. Positive for | Austria | 3 | 48 | 1 week AS (If antibiotics at least 3 days after last dose of antibiotics) | |
| Denmark | 0 | – | – | ||
| UK | 0 | – | – | ||
| Ireland | 2 | 24 | AS | ||
| Norway | O103 | 5 | 24 | 2–3 days AS | |
| ≠ O103 | 3 | 24 | 2–3 days AS | ||
| B. Positive for | Austria | 3 | 48 | 1 week AS (If antibiotics at least 3 days after last dose of antibiotics) | |
| Denmark | 0 | – | – | ||
| UK | 2 | 24 | AS | ||
| Ireland | 2 | 24 | AS | ||
| Norway | O103 | 5 | 24 | 2–3 days AS | |
| ≠ O103 | 3 | 24 | |||
| C. Positive for | Austria | 3 | 48 | 1 week AS (If antibiotics at least 3 days after last dose of antibiotics) | |
| Denmark | 2 | Not specified | AS | ||
| ≠ | 0 | – | – | ||
| UK | 2 | 24 | AS | ||
| Ireland | 2 | 24 | AS | ||
| Norway | 5 | 24 | 2–3 days AS | ||
| D. Positive for | Austria | 3 | 48 | 1 week AS (If antibiotics at least 3 days after last dose of antibiotics). | |
| Denmark | 2 | Not specified | AS | ||
| ≠ | 0 | – | – | ||
| UK | 2 | 24 | AS | ||
| Ireland | 2 | 24 | AS | ||
| Norway | 5 | 24 | 2–3 days AS | ||
| E. Develop HUS with positive laboratory test for STEC | Austria | 3 | 48 | 1 week AS (If antibiotics at least 3 days after last dose of antibiotics). | |
| Denmark | 2 | Not specified | AS | ||
| UK | 2 | 24 | AS | ||
| Ireland | 2 | 24 | AS | ||
| Norway | 5 | 24 | 2–3 days AS | ||
| F. Develop HUS with only clinical criteria | Austria | 1 | – | 1 week AS (If antibiotics at least 3 days after last dose of antibiotics) | |
| Denmark | 2, if no other reason for HUS is found | Not specified | AS | ||
| UK | 2 | 24 | AS | ||
| Ireland | 0 | – | – | ||
| Norway | 5 | 24 | 2–3 days AS | ||
AS: after symptoms of diarrhoea have ceased.
Screening/exclusion and microbiological clearance for asymptomatic close contacts of STEC cases belonging to high-risk groups, EU/EEA survey 2016
| Country | Screening required always | Indication for screening/exclusion | Microbiological clearance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of negative control samples | Hours interval of sampling (start sampling | |||
| Austria | Yes | – | NR | NR |
| Belgium, Brussels and Flanders | No | Only if ⩾2 cases, screening of all contacts | NR | NR |
| Belgium, Wallonia | No | After ⩾1 case of O157 or ⩾2 cases of O26, O103, O11, O145, O121 | NR | NR |
| Denmark | No | Test if children or food handler | 1 | – (AS) |
| Finland | No | Siblings in diapers whose pre-school age sibling is the index case | 1 | |
| France | No | Siblings to the index case | NR | NR |
| Greece | No | ⩾2 cases | NR | NR |
| Ireland | No | All household contacts that belong to high-risk group. All kindergarten contacts if transmission within kindergarten suspected (e.g. if further cases of HUS, bloody diarrhoea or a second STEC case identified) | 2 | 24 (AS) |
| The Netherlands | No | Only children <5 years old | NR | NR |
| Slovenia | No | In case of outbreak, in case of contacts who work with food or in health care | NR | NR |
| Spain | No | Depends on the laboratory (some request samples) | NR | NR |
| Sweden | Yes | – | 1 | – (AS) |
| UK | No | Depends on local authorities (some request samples). But all class/nursing home is tested If there is a symptomatic contact to kindergarten/nursing homes | 2 | 24 (AS) |
| Norway | Yes | – | 3 | 24 (AS and AS of index case) |
NR, not reported; −, not applicable.
AS: after symptoms of diarrhoea have ceased.
Fig. 1.Revised Norwegian STEC guidelines, autumn 2016. Differentiation of control measures based on stx profile. aSTEC cases negative for stx, but eae-positive E. coli strain (STEC-LST) with a genotype (MLVA-type) previously seen in a HUS case in Norway are also classified as high-virulent STEC.