In a collaborative study between the Oregon Public Health Division,
the Minnesota Department of Health, and the US Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC), Lore E Lee, MPH, from the Oregon Public
Health Division in Portland, and colleagues found that gastroenteritis
in long-term care facilities (LTCFs) may be caused by sapovirus, an
organism not routinely tested. The findings, published online 11 Apr
2012 in Emerging Infectious Diseases [Lee LE et al: Sapovirus
outbreaks in long-term care facilities, Oregon and Minnesota, USA,
2002-2009. Emerg Infect Dis. 2012; 18(5); available at
]
underscore the need for multiorganism testing during gastroenteritis
outbreaks, as the exact etiology of the outbreak can be difficult to
discern on the basis of clinical profile alone.
vendredi 13 avril 2012
Sapovirus is a growing concern in long-term care facilities
Sapovirus is a growing concern in long-term care facilities
Using data from the Oregon and Minnesota public health departments,
the researchers investigated 2161 gastroenteritis outbreaks between
2002 through 2009. Of these, 142 outbreaks (7 percent) were found to
be norovirus-negative, and 93 of these were further tested for other
gastrointestinal viruses including sapovirus, astrovirus, adenovirus,
and rotavirus. Sapovirus was identified in 21 outbreaks (23 percent),
with 66 percent of these occurring in LTCFs. Close to half of these
cases occurred in 2007 alone.
Using data from 14 of the 21 outbreaks, for which clinical data on 141
to 269 patients were available, symptoms appeared to last from 24 to
105 hours (median duration, 48 hours), and the clinical profile
included vomiting (49 percent), diarrhea (88 percent), and fever (23
percent). "4 (19 percent) of 21 sapovirus outbreaks were caused by
sapovirus [genogroup I (GI)], 1 (5 percent) by sapovirus GII, 15 (71
percent) by sapovirus GIV, and 1 (5 percent) by sapovirus GV," the
authors report. The clinical symptoms and outbreak settings were not
statistically different among genogroups.
The researchers note that
the clinical findings are similar to the criteria used to evaluate
norovirus outbreaks in settings where laboratory resources are
limited. "We found, however, that sapovirus and norovirus outbreaks
are clinically and epidemiologically similar enough to be
indistinguishable without laboratory testing," write the authors.
The high proportion of sapovirus outbreaks among LTCFs may not
represent a true distribution of sapovirus outbreaks in Oregon and
Minnesota, discuss the authors. Rather, these findings may be
artifactual as a result of legally mandated outbreak reporting by
healthcare facilities. The authors note that the spike in sapovirus
gastroenteritis cases in 2007 may have been part of a worldwide surge
in gastroenteritis outbreaks that year; however, sapovirus infections
among patients aged 65 years or older do appear to have been trending
upward since 2002.
The researchers acknowledge study limitations such as selection bias,
possible underreporting from institutions where outbreak reporting is
not legally mandated, and the fact that norovirus-positive samples
were not tested for sapovirus, which may have led to sapovirus
outbreaks being underestimated.
"In keeping with recent recommendations, at minimum, adding sapovirus
to routine diagnostics of infections that occur in any setting and by
any mode of transmission will establish etiologies of some
norovirus-negative outbreaks and help define the disease impact and
clinical characteristics of sapovirus infections," conclude the
authors. "These data can in turn be used to develop and evaluate
sapovirus disease management guidelines and sapovirus outbreak
prevention and control measures."
[Byline: Jennifer Garcia]
--
Communicated by:
ProMED-mail
[The family _Caliciviridae_ contains 4 genera _Sapovirus_,
_Norovirus_, _Lagovirus_, and _Vesivirus_, which include Sapo virus
(SaV), Norwalk virus (NoV), Rabbit hemorrhagic disease virus (RHDV),
and Feline calicivirus (FCV), respectively. SaV is a causative agent
of gastroenteritis in children and adults. SaV can be divided into 5
genogroups (GI-GV), among which GI, GII, GIV, and GV are known to
infect humans, whereas SaV GIII infects porcine species. Sapovirus was
first detected in 1977 as the cause of a gastroenteritis outbreak in a
home for infants in Sapporo, Japan, and was thereafter reported
primarily among young children with acute gastroenteritis. After
sapovirus diagnostic RT-PCR was developed, sapovirus outbreaks were
discovered in LTCFs and other settings populated by adults.
In their conclusions the authors note that: "In this study, the high
(66 percent) proportion of sapovirus outbreaks in LTCFs among 21
outbreaks of previously unknown etiologies is likely to be an artifact
of legally mandated outbreak reporting by health care facilities
rather than the true distribution of sapovirus outbreaks in Oregon and
Minnesota. Still, elderly residents of LTCFs are especially vulnerable
to rapid transmission of viral enteric pathogens and serious
complications from infection with these agents, and therefore merit
the attention of public health."
"Our data, together with a recent study in Canada, demonstrate that
sapovirus has been circulating among the institutionalized elderly
since at least 2002 and that sapovirus outbreaks increased in 2007 as
part of a worldwide surge in gastroenteritis outbreaks. Before these
retrospective studies, sapovirus infections among adults 65 years old
and older had been reported as single cases at a low (3 percent) rate
in 2002 and as nosocomial outbreaks in 2010 and 2005.
Sapovirus outbreaks occurred in the same settings and had the same
seasonal distribution as norovirus outbreaks. This study adds clinical
details to information provided by studies in Canada and Europe. The
clinical profile of sapovirus outbreaks in this study (49 percent
vomiting, 88 percent diarrhea, and 23 percent fever, plus a median
duration of 48 hours) approximates the criteria which are still used
to evaluate norovirus outbreaks when laboratory resources are limited.
However sapovirus and norovirus outbreaks are clinically and
epidemiologically similar enough to be indistinguishable without
laboratory testing." - Mod.CP
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