101 results on '"Spiteri G."'
Search Results
2. Characteristics of SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern B.1.1.7, B.1.351 or P.1: data from seven EU/EEA countries, weeks 38/2020 to 10/2021
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Funk T., Pharris A., Spiteri G., Bundle N., Melidou A., Carr M., Gonzalez G., Garcia-Leon A., Crispie F., O'Connor L., Murphy N., Mossong J., Vergison A., Wienecke-Baldacchino A. K., Abdelrahman T., Riccardo F., Stefanelli P., Di Martino A., Bella A., Lo Presti A., Casaca P., Moreno J., Borges V., Isidro J., Ferreira R., Gomes J. P., Dotsenko L., Suija H., Epstein J., Sadikova O., Sepp H., Ikonen N., Savolainen-Kopra C., Blomqvist S., Mottonen T., Helve O., Gomes-Dias J., Adlhoch C., Macori G., Russell L., Yandle Z., Bennett C., O'Byrne E., Murphy A., Tuite G., Conroy A., Duffy M., Morley U., Keoghan B., Ford I., Kennedy M., McDonnell S., Flynn A., Clarke A., Crowley A., Martin C., Kelly E., Foxton J., Hare D., Dunford L., Connell J., Moran J., Dean J., Fanning S., Rajan L., De Gascun C., Kenny J., Cotter P., Walsh C., Lawton E., Fitzpatrick A., Mullins E., Della Bartola M., McCabe M., Stapleton P., Meaney C., Fanning L., Prentice M., MacSharry J., Dempsey C., Mallon P., Leon A., Chaturvedi A., Coughlan S., McAndrew G., Reddington K., Walsh F., Fitzpatrick D., Smyth C., O'Dwyer T., Chambers T., Clarke L., Jebb D., Klopp J., Kavanagh D., Haslam K., Buckley P., Lemass K., Fitzpatrick F., Burns K., Cafferkey J., Richmond A., Foley M., Sanchez-Morgado J., Chalapati S., Pinnamaneni N., Crosbie C., Limbachiya D., Tinago W., Garcia Leon A. A., Miles S., Alalwan D., Negi R., Macken A., Feeney E., Kenny G., McCann K., Kelly N., Blair M., McCann R., Kenny C., O'Brion C., Waqas S., Savinelli S., Doran P., Bracken T., Varghese P., Lambert J. S., Cotter A., Muldoon E., Sheehan G., McGinty T., Lambert J., Green S., Leamy K., de Barra E., McConkey S., Kelly C., Horgan M., Sadlier C., Yousif O., O'Donnell J., Fitzgerald M., Petty-Saphon N., Cuddihy J., Fiore S., Fabiani C., Benedetti E., Di Mario G., Facchini M., Puzelli S., Calzoletti L., Fontana S., Venturi G., Fortuna C., Marsili G., Amendola A., Stuppia L., Savini G., Picerno A., Lopizzo T., Dell'Edera D., Minchella P., Greco F., Mauro M. V., Viglietto G., Atripaldi L., Limone A., D'Agaro P., Licastro D., Marcello A., Capobianchi M. R., Icardi G., Bruzzone B., Lillo F., Orsi A., Pariani E., Baldanti F., Gismondo M. R., Maggi F., Caruso A., Ceriotti F., Boniotti B., Bagnarelli P., Garofalo S., Scutella M., Pagani E., Collini L., Ghisetti V., Ru G., Chironna M., Parisi A., Rubino S., Serra C., Piras G., Coghe F., Vitale F., Tramuto F., Scalia G., Palermo C. I., Mancuso G., Di Gaudio F., Vullo S., Reale S., Cusi M. G., Rossolini G. M., Pistello M., Mencacci A., Camilloni B., Severini S., Di Benedetto M., Calogero T., Monne I., Biscaro V., COVID Study Groups, Funk T., Pharris A., Spiteri G., Bundle N., Melidou A., Carr M., Gonzalez G., Garcia-Leon A., Crispie F., O'Connor L., Murphy N., Mossong J., Vergison A., Wienecke-Baldacchino A.K., Abdelrahman T., Riccardo F., Stefanelli P., Di Martino A., Bella A., Lo Presti A., Casaca P., Moreno J., Borges V., Isidro J., Ferreira R., Gomes J.P., Dotsenko L., Suija H., Epstein J., Sadikova O., Sepp H., Ikonen N., Savolainen-Kopra C., Blomqvist S., Mottonen T., Helve O., Gomes-Dias J., Adlhoch C., Macori G., Russell L., Yandle Z., Bennett C., O'Byrne E., Murphy A., Tuite G., Conroy A., Duffy M., Morley U., Keoghan B., Ford I., Kennedy M., McDonnell S., Flynn A., Clarke A., Crowley A., Martin C., Kelly E., Foxton J., Hare D., Dunford L., Connell J., Moran J., Dean J., Fanning S., Rajan L., De Gascun C., Kenny J., Cotter P., Walsh C., Lawton E., Fitzpatrick A., Mullins E., Della Bartola M., McCabe M., Stapleton P., Meaney C., Fanning L., Prentice M., MacSharry J., Dempsey C., Mallon P., Leon A., Chaturvedi A., Coughlan S., McAndrew G., Reddington K., Walsh F., Fitzpatrick D., Smyth C., O'Dwyer T., Chambers T., Clarke L., Jebb D., Klopp J., Kavanagh D., Haslam K., Buckley P., Lemass K., Fitzpatrick F., Burns K., Cafferkey J., Richmond A., Foley M., Sanchez-Morgado J., Chalapati S., Pinnamaneni N., Crosbie C., Limbachiya D., Tinago W., Garcia Leon A.A., Miles S., Alalwan D., Negi R., Macken A., Feeney E., Kenny G., McCann K., Kelly N., Blair M., McCann R., Kenny C., O'Brion C., Waqas S., Savinelli S., Doran P., Bracken T., Varghese P., Lambert J.S., Cotter A., Muldoon E., Sheehan G., McGinty T., Lambert J., Green S., Leamy K., de Barra E., McConkey S., Kelly C., Horgan M., Sadlier C., Yousif O., O'Donnell J., Fitzgerald M., Petty-Saphon N., Cuddihy J., Fiore S., Fabiani C., Benedetti E., Di Mario G., Facchini M., Puzelli S., Calzoletti L., Fontana S., Venturi G., Fortuna C., Marsili G., Amendola A., Stuppia L., Savini G., Picerno A., Lopizzo T., Dell'Edera D., Minchella P., Greco F., Mauro M.V., Viglietto G., Atripaldi L., Limone A., D'Agaro P., Licastro D., Marcello A., Capobianchi M.R., Icardi G., Bruzzone B., Lillo F., Orsi A., Pariani E., Baldanti F., Gismondo M.R., Maggi F., Caruso A., Ceriotti F., Boniotti B., Bagnarelli P., Garofalo S., Scutella M., Pagani E., Collini L., Ghisetti V., Ru G., Chironna M., Parisi A., Rubino S., Serra C., Piras G., Coghe F., Vitale F., Tramuto F., Scalia G., Palermo C.I., Mancuso G., Di Gaudio F., Vullo S., Reale S., Cusi M.G., Rossolini G.M., Pistello M., Mencacci A., Camilloni B., Severini S., Di Benedetto M., Calogero T., Monne I., Biscaro V., and COVID Study Groups
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Infecções Respiratórias ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Critical Care ,Epidemiology ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,variants of concern ,Settore MED/42 - Igiene Generale E Applicata ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Virology ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Intensive care admission ,030212 general & internal medicine ,COVID-19 ,Europe ,SARS-CoV-2 ,surveillance ,Surveillance ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Odds ratio ,Confidence interval ,Variants of Concern ,COVID-19, Europe, SARS-CoV-2, surveillance, variants of concern ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Rapid Communication ,Human - Abstract
COVID study groups - PORTUGAL: Portuguese Laboratory Network for the Diagnosis of COVID-19 and Public Health Department of the Health Administrative Regions, Physicians that provided data and samples from suspected cases and SARS-CoV-2 genetic characterization. INSA laboratory team for the diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2. Algarve Biomedical Center and Unilabs. We compared 19,207 cases of SARS-CoV-2 variant B.1.1.7/S gene target failure (SGTF), 436 B.1.351 and 352 P.1 to non-variant cases reported by seven European countries. COVID-19 cases with these variants had significantly higher adjusted odds ratios for hospitalisation (B.1.1.7/SGTF: 1.7, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.0-2.9; B.1.351: 3.6, 95% CI: 2.1-6.2; P.1: 2.6, 95% CI: 1.4-4.8) and B.1.1.7/SGTF and P.1 cases also for intensive care admission (B.1.1.7/SGTF: 2.3, 95% CI: 1.4-3.5; P.1: 2.2, 95% CI: 1.7-2.8). ECDC internal funds. The ICSC and the AIID Cohort are supported by Science Foundation Ireland under the Science Foundation Ireland, Enterprise Ireland, IDA Ireland COVID-19 Rapid Response Funding Call (Grant number: COVID-RRC 20/COV/0103 and COVID-RRC 20/COV/0305). info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
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- 2021
3. Salute e sicurezza sul lavoro nelle sale operatorie ibride: un’analisi ergonomica
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Monaco, M. G. L., Carta, A., Spiteri, G., Barooty, A., Conforti, R., Maran, F., Rostello, M., Tamhid, T., Visentin, M., and Porru, S.
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sale operatorie ,ibride ,salute e sicurezza - Published
- 2022
4. Riduzione del consumo di sale tra i lavoratori della sanità: efficacia di un intervento di promozione della salute
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Spiteri, G., Monaco, M. G. L., Tamhid, T., Taus, F., Torroni, L., Verlato, G., Carta, A., and Porru, S.
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sanitari ,promozione salute ,sale - Published
- 2022
5. Serological response after SARS-CoV2 vaccination in healthcare workers: a multicenter study
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Visci G, Zunarelli C, Mansour I, Porru S, De Palma G, Duval X, Monaco MGL, Spiteri G, Carta A, Lippi G, Verlato G, Sansone E, Sala E, Lombardo M, Abedini M, Violante F, Boffetta P.
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- 2022
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6. Incidence and severity of pertussis hospitalisations in infants aged less than 1 year in 37 hospitals of six EU/EEA countries, results of PERTINENT sentinel pilot surveillance system, December 2015 to December 2018
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Merdrignac L, Aït El Belghiti F, Pandolfi E, Jané M, Murphy J, Fabiánová K, García Cenoz M, Flem E, Guillot S, Tozzi AE, Carmona G, Habington A, Zavadilová J, Navasués A, Bøås H, Lévy-Brühl D, Ferretti B, Miguel Lanaspa Pérez, O'Sullivan N, Krížová P, Fernandino L, Bekkevold T, Hanslik T, Munoz-Almagro C, Bacci S, Spiteri G, Valenciano M, Moren A, PERTINENT Group, and PERTINENT group
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pertussis ,active surveillance ,hospital surveillance ,pertussis incidence - Abstract
IntroductionPERTINENT is a pilot active surveillance system of infants hospitalised with pertussis in six European Union/European Economic Area countries (37 hospitals, seven sites).AimThis observational study aimed to estimate annual pertussis incidence per site from 2016 to 2018 and respective trends between 2017 and 2018. Pertussis cases were described, including their severity.MethodsWe developed a generic protocol and laboratory guidelines to harmonise practices across sites. Cases were hospitalised infants testing positive for Bordetella pertussis by PCR or culture. Sites collected demographic, clinical, laboratory data, vaccination status, and risk/protective factors. We estimated sites' annual incidences by dividing case numbers by the catchment populations.ResultsFrom December 2015 to December 2018, we identified 469 cases (247 males; 53%). The median age, birthweight and gestational age were 2.5 months (range: 0-11.6; interquartile range (IQR): 2.5), 3,280 g (range: 700-4,925; IQR: 720) and 39 weeks (range: 25-42; IQR: 2), respectively. Thirty cases (6%) had atypical presentation either with cough or cyanosis only or with absence of pertussis-like symptoms. Of 330 cases with information, 83 (25%) were admitted to intensive care units including five deceased infants too young to be vaccinated. Incidence rate ratios between 2018 and 2017 were 1.43 in Czech Republic (p = 0.468), 0.25 in Catalonia (p = 0.002), 0.71 in France (p = 0.034), 0.14 in Ireland (p = 0.002), 0.63 in Italy (p = 0.053), 0.21 in Navarra (p = 0.148) and zero in Norway.ConclusionsIncidence appeared to decrease between 2017 and 2018 in all but one site. Enhanced surveillance of hospitalised pertussis in Europe is essential to monitor pertussis epidemiology and disease burden.
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- 2021
7. Characteristics of SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern B.1.1.7, B.1.351 or P.1: data from seven EU/EEA countries, weeks 38/2020 to 10/2021.
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Funk, T, Pharris, A, Spiteri, G, Bundle, N, Melidou, A, Carr, M, Gonzalez, G, Garcia-Leon, A, Crispie, F, O'Connor, L, Murphy, N, Mossong, J, Vergison, A, Wienecke-Baldacchino, AK, Abdelrahman, T, Riccardo, F, Stefanelli, P, Di Martino, A, Bella, A, Lo Presti, A, Casaca, P, Moreno, J, Borges, V, Isidro, J, Ferreira, R, Gomes, JP, Dotsenko, L, Suija, H, Epstein, J, Sadikova, O, Sepp, H, Ikonen, N, Savolainen-Kopra, C, Blomqvist, S, Möttönen, T, Helve, O, Gomes-Dias, J, Adlhoch, C, COVID study groups, Funk, T, Pharris, A, Spiteri, G, Bundle, N, Melidou, A, Carr, M, Gonzalez, G, Garcia-Leon, A, Crispie, F, O'Connor, L, Murphy, N, Mossong, J, Vergison, A, Wienecke-Baldacchino, AK, Abdelrahman, T, Riccardo, F, Stefanelli, P, Di Martino, A, Bella, A, Lo Presti, A, Casaca, P, Moreno, J, Borges, V, Isidro, J, Ferreira, R, Gomes, JP, Dotsenko, L, Suija, H, Epstein, J, Sadikova, O, Sepp, H, Ikonen, N, Savolainen-Kopra, C, Blomqvist, S, Möttönen, T, Helve, O, Gomes-Dias, J, Adlhoch, C, and COVID study groups
- Abstract
We compared 19,207 cases of SARS-CoV-2 variant B.1.1.7/S gene target failure (SGTF), 436 B.1.351 and 352 P.1 to non-variant cases reported by seven European countries. COVID-19 cases with these variants had significantly higher adjusted odds ratios for hospitalisation (B.1.1.7/SGTF: 1.7, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.0-2.9; B.1.351: 3.6, 95% CI: 2.1-6.2; P.1: 2.6, 95% CI: 1.4-4.8) and B.1.1.7/SGTF and P.1 cases also for intensive care admission (B.1.1.7/SGTF: 2.3, 95% CI: 1.4-3.5; P.1: 2.2, 95% CI: 1.7-2.8).
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- 2021
8. The magnitude and distribution of infectious intestinal disease in Malta: a population-based study
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GAUCI, C., GILLES, H., OʼBRIEN, S., MAMO, J., STABILE, I., RUGGERI, F. M., GATT, A., CALLEJA, N., and SPITERI, G.
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- 2007
9. Estimating the burden and cost of infectious intestinal disease in the Maltese community
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GAUCI, C., GILLES, H., OʼBRIEN, S., MAMO, J., STABILE, I., RUGGERI, F. M., CALLEJA, N., and SPITERI, G.
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- 2007
10. Population-level antimicrobial consumption is associated with decreased antimicrobial susceptibility in Neisseria gonorrhoeae in 24 European countries : an ecological analysis
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Kenyon, Chris, Buyze, Jozefien, Spiteri, G., Cole, M. J., Unemo, Magnus, Kenyon, Chris, Buyze, Jozefien, Spiteri, G., Cole, M. J., and Unemo, Magnus
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OBJECTIVES: There are substantial variations in Neisseria gonorrhoeae susceptibility to antimicrobials between different populations, and the reasons for this are largely unexplored. We aimed to assess if the population level consumption of antimicrobials is a contributory factor. METHODS: Using antimicrobial susceptibility data from 24 countries in the European Gonococcal Antimicrobial Surveillance Programme and antimicrobial consumption data from the IQVIA MIDAS database, we built mixed effects linear/logistic regression models with country-level cephalosporin, fluoroquinolone and macrolide consumption (standard doses/1000 population/year) as the explanatory variables (from 2009 to 2015) and 1-year lagged ceftriaxone, cefixime, azithromycin and ciprofloxacin geometric mean minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) as the outcome variables (2010 to 2016). RESULTS: Positive correlations were found between the consumption of cephalosporins and geometric mean MIC of ceftriaxone and cefixime (both P's <0.05). Fluoroquinolone consumption was positively associated with the prevalence of resistance to ciprofloxacin (P<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Differences in population level consumption of particular antimicrobials may contribute to the variations in the level of antimicrobial resistance in N. gonorrhoeae in different settings. Further interventions to reduce misuse and overuse of antimicrobials in high-consumption populations and core-groups are required.
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- 2020
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11. Quantifying outcome misclassification in multi-database studies: The case study of pertussis in the ADVANCE project
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Gini, R. (Rosa), Dodd, C.N. (Caitlin), Bollaerts, K. (Kaatje), Bartolini, C. (Claudia), Roberto, G. (Giuseppe), Huerta Alvarez, C. (C.), Martín-Merino, E. (E.), Duarte-Salles, T. (Talita), Picelli, G. (Gino), Tramontan, L. (Lara), Danieli, G. (Giorgia), Correa, A. (Ana), McGee, C. (C.), Becker, B.F.H. (Benedikt), Switzer, C. (Charlotte), Gandhi-Banga, S. (S.), Bauwens, J. (Jorgen), Maas, N.A.T. (Nicoline) van der, Spiteri, G. (Gianfranco), Sdona, E. (Emmanouela), Weibel, D.M. (Daniel), Sturkenboom, M. (Miriam), Gini, R. (Rosa), Dodd, C.N. (Caitlin), Bollaerts, K. (Kaatje), Bartolini, C. (Claudia), Roberto, G. (Giuseppe), Huerta Alvarez, C. (C.), Martín-Merino, E. (E.), Duarte-Salles, T. (Talita), Picelli, G. (Gino), Tramontan, L. (Lara), Danieli, G. (Giorgia), Correa, A. (Ana), McGee, C. (C.), Becker, B.F.H. (Benedikt), Switzer, C. (Charlotte), Gandhi-Banga, S. (S.), Bauwens, J. (Jorgen), Maas, N.A.T. (Nicoline) van der, Spiteri, G. (Gianfranco), Sdona, E. (Emmanouela), Weibel, D.M. (Daniel), and Sturkenboom, M. (Miriam)
- Abstract
Background: The Accelerated Development of VAccine beNefit-risk Collaboration in Europe (ADVANCE) is a public-private collaboration aiming to develop and test a system for rapid benefit-risk (B/R) monitoring of vaccines using European healthcare databases. Event misclassification can result in biased estimates. Using different algorithms for identifying cases of Bordetella pertussis (BorPer) infection as a test case, we aimed to describe a strategy to quantify event misclassification, when manual chart review is not feasible. Methods: Four participating databases retrieved data from primary care (PC) setting: BIFAP: (Spain), THIN and RCGP RSC (UK) and PEDIANET (Italy); SIDIAP (Spain) retrieved data from both PC and hospital settings. BorPer algorithms were defined by healthcare setting, data domain (diagnoses, drugs, or laboratory tests) and concept sets (specific or unspecified pertussis). Algorithm- and database-specific BorPer incidence rates (IRs) were estimated in children aged 0–14 years enrolled in 2012 and 2014 and followed up until the end of each calendar year and compared with IRs of confirmed pertussis from the ECDC surveillance system (TESSy). Novel formulas were used to approximate validity indices, based on a small set of assumptions. They were applied to approximately estimate positive predictive value (PPV) and sensitivity in SIDIAP. Results: The number of cases and the estimated BorPer IRs per 100,000 person-years in PC, using data representing 3,173,268 person-years, were 0 (IR = 0.0), 21 (IR = 4.3), 21 (IR = 5.1), 79 (IR = 5.7), and 2 (IR = 2.3) in BIFAP, SIDIAP, THIN, RCGP RSC and PEDIANET respectively. The IRs for combined specific/unspecified pertussis were higher than TESSy, suggesting that some false positives had been included. In SIDIAP the estimated IR was 45.0 when discharge diagnoses were included. The sensitivity and PPV of combined PC specific and unspecific diagnoses for BorPer cases in SIDIAP were approximately 85% and 72%, respecti
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- 2019
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12. Patologie non neoplastiche da esposizione lavorativa ad amianto
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Porru, S, Feroldi, E, and Spiteri, G
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benign pleural abnormalities - occupational exposures - ex exposed ,pleuropatie benigne ,ex esposti ,asbestosi ,asbestosi, pleuropatie benigne, esposizione occupazionale, ex esposti ,esposizione occupazionale - Published
- 2018
13. Travel-associated gonorrhoea in four Nordic countries, 2008 to 2013
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Beauté, J, Cowan, S, Hiltunen-Back, E, Kløvstad, Hilde, Velicko, I, and Spiteri, G
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- 2017
14. Trends in HIV surveillance data in the EU/EEA, 2005 to 2014: New HIV diagnoses still increasing in men who have sex with men
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Pharris, Anastasia, Quinten, C., Tavoschi, L., Spiteri, G., Amato-Gauci, A. J., Schmid, D., Sasse, A., Beckhoven, D. Van, Varleva, T., Blazic, Tatjana Nemeth, Koliou, M., Hadjihannas, L., Maly, M., Cowan, Susan, Rüütel, K., Liitsola, K., Salminen, M., Cazein, F., Pillonel, J., Lot, F., Gunsenheimer-Bartmeyer, Barbara, Nikolopoulos, Georgios K., Paraskeva, D., Dudas, M., Briem, H., Sigmundsdottir, G., Igoe, D., O’Donnell, K., O’Flanagan, D., Suligoi, B., Konova, S., Erne, S., Caplinskiene, I., Jean-Schmit, C., Melillo, J. M., Melillo, T., Coul, E. Op De, Blystad, H., Rosinska, M., Diniz, A., Mardarescu, Mariana, Truska, P., Klavs, I., Diez, M., Avdicova, Maria, Delpech, Valerie, and Nikolopoulos, Georgios K.[0000-0002-3307-0246]
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Male ,Delayed Diagnosis ,Epidemiology ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,HIV Infections ,medicine.disease_cause ,Men who have sex with men ,Risk Factors ,Diagnosis ,Medical diagnosis ,media_common ,human immunodeficiency virus ,Transmission (medicine) ,Human immunodeficiency virus ,AIDS Serodiagnosis ,Homosexuality ,Emigration and Immigration ,Early diagnosis ,Cell count ,Virus diagnosis ,AIDS ,Europe ,Population Surveillance ,Public Health ,Human ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Virus transmission ,Cd4+ t lymphocyte ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Virology ,medicine ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Humans ,European Union ,European union ,Homosexuality, Male ,Hiv surveillance ,HIV ,acquired immunodeficiency syndrome ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,business.industry ,Prevention ,Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine.disease ,Immunology ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission remains significant in Europe. Rates of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) have declined, but not in all countries. New HIV diagnoses have increased among native and foreign-born men who have sex with men. Median CD4 + T-cell count at diagnosis has increased, but not in all groups, and late diagnosis remains common. HIV infection and AIDS can be eliminated in Europe with resolute prevention measures, early diagnosis and access to effective treatment. © 2015, European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC). All rights reserved. 20 47
- Published
- 2015
15. Second European multi-disciplinary conference of national strategies for Chlamydia trach. and human papillomavirus NSCP conf. in Berlin, 2013 enhanced detection, management and surveillance of sexually transmitted infections in Europe are essential!
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Ozolins, D., D' Elios, M. M., Ripa, T., Bailey, R., Timms, P., Spiteri, G., Haar, K., and Unemo, M.
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Male ,HPV ,Papillomavirus Infections ,Vaccination ,Sexually Transmitted Diseases ,Chlamydia trachomatis ,Chlamydia Infections ,Congresses as Topic ,Europe ,STI ,surveillance ,diagnostics ,vaccine ,conference ,Female ,Humans ,Mass Screening - Abstract
There is a need for updated guidance on detection, management and surveillance of sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Chlamydia, gonorrhoea and syphilisreporting needs to be mandatory in more European countries to aid collection of data. More widespread Chlamydia screening is needed in many countries as this is the only way to reduce complications. The role of Human Papillomavirus (HPV) screening in a situation where the prevalence of HPV infection has dropped significantly was also discussed in the context of the high cost of screening, the need for a relatively complex infrastructure, particularly in developing countries, and falling vaccination costs. An integrated HPV vaccination and screening policy could be the most appropriate with vaccination at 9-13 years as recommended by WHO and a single HPV screen at 35-39 years, possibly repeated thereafter every 10 years. Female and male HPV vaccination programmes could lead to near elimination of genital warts in both females and males. Surveillance of STIsshould be intensified where needed; additional or better quality data should be collected including reasons for testing, denominator data to estimate positivity rates, diagnostic methods, concurrent STIs, sexual orientation and country of acquisition; more analytical rather than descriptive epidemiology is needed.
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- 2013
16. Higher all-cause mortality in children during autumn 2009 compared with the three previous years: pooled results from eight European countries
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Mazick, A., Gergonne, B., Wuillaume, F., Danis, K., Apostolos Vantarakis, Uphoff, H., Spiteri, G., Klooster, T., Junker, C., Holmberg, M., and Molbak, K.
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Adult ,Adolescent ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Middle Aged ,Europe ,Young Adult ,Cause of Death ,Child, Preschool ,Child Mortality ,Humans ,Registries ,Child ,Aged - Abstract
The paper describes weekly fluctuations of all-cause mortality observed in eight European countries during the period between week 27 and 51, 2009, in comparison with three previous years. Our preliminary data show that the mortality reported during the 2009 influenza pandemic did not reach levels normally seen during seasonal influenza epidemics. However, there was a cumulative excess mortality of 77 cases (1 per 100,000 population) in 5-14-year-olds, and possibly also among 0-4-year-olds.
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- 2010
17. Surveillance of Zika virus infection in the EU/EEA, June 2015 to January 2017.
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Spiteri, G., Sudre, B., Septfons, A., and Beauté, J.
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- 2017
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18. Travel-associated gonorrhoea in four Nordic countries, 2008 to 2013.
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Beauté, J., Cowan, S., Hiltunen-Back, E., Kløvstad, H., Velicko, I., and Spiteri, G.
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- 2017
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19. Ten years after Dublin: principal trends in HIV surveillance in the EU/EEA, 2004 to 2013
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Pharris, A, primary, Spiteri, G, additional, Noori, T, additional, and Amato-Gauci, A J, additional
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- 2014
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20. Emerging cephalosporin and multidrug-resistant gonorrhoea in Europe
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Cole, M J, primary, Spiteri, G, additional, Chisholm, S A, additional, Hoffmann, S, additional, Ison, C A, additional, Unemo, M, additional, and Van de Laar, M, additional
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- 2014
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21. Surveillance of human immunodeficiency virus suggests that younger men who have sex with men are at higher risk of infection, European Union, 2003 to 2012
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Janiec, J, primary, Haar, K, additional, Spiteri, G, additional, Likatavicius, G, additional, Van de Laar, M, additional, and Amato-Gauci, A J, additional
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- 2013
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22. Increasing trends of gonorrhoea and syphilis and the threat of drug-resistant gonorrhoea in Europe
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Van de Laar, M, primary and Spiteri, G, additional
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- 2012
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23. A cluster of rubella in Malta, December 2007 - January 2008
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Spiteri, G, primary, Fenech Magrin, A-M, additional, and Muscat, M, additional
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- 2008
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24. Trends in HIV surveillance data in the EU/EEA, 2005 to 2014: new HIV diagnoses still increasing in men who have sex with men.
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Pharris, A., Quinten, C., Tavoschi, L., Spiteri, G., and Amato-Gauci, AJ
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- 2015
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25. SARS-CoV-2 Breakthrough Infections: Incidence and Risk Factors in a Large European Multicentric Cohort of Health Workers
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Stefano Porru, Maria Grazia Lourdes Monaco, Gianluca Spiteri, Angela Carta, Maria Diletta Pezzani, Giuseppe Lippi, Davide Gibellini, Evelina Tacconelli, Ilaria Dalla Vecchia, Emma Sala, Emanuele Sansone, Giuseppe De Palma, Carlo Bonfanti, Massimo Lombardo, Luigina Terlenghi, Enrico Pira, Ihab Mansour, Maurizio Coggiola, Catalina Ciocan, Alessandro Godono, Adonina Tardon, Marta-Maria Rodriguez-Suarez, Guillermo Fernandez-Tardon, Francisco-Jose Jimeno-Demuth, Rafael-Vicente Castro-Delgado, Tania Iglesias Cabo, Maria Luisa Scapellato, Filippo Liviero, Angelo Moretto, Paola Mason, Sofia Pavanello, Anna Volpin, Luigi Vimercati, Silvio Tafuri, Luigi De Maria, Stefania Sponselli, Pasquale Stefanizzi, Antonio Caputi, Fabriziomaria Gobba, Alberto Modenese, Loretta Casolari, Denise Garavini, Cristiana D’Elia, Stefania Mariani, Francesca Larese Filon, Luca Cegolon, Corrado Negro, Federico Ronchese, Francesca Rui, Paola De Michieli, Nicola Murgia, Marco Dell’Omo, Giacomo Muzi, Tiziana Fiordi, Angela Gambelunghe, Ilenia Folletti, Dana Mates, Violeta Claudia Calota, Andra Neamtu, Ovidiu Perseca, Catalin Alexandru Staicu, Angelica Voinoiu, Eleonóra Fabiánová, Jana Bérešová, Zora Kľocová Adamčáková, Roman Nedela, Anna Lesňáková, Jana Holčíková, Paolo Boffetta, Mahsa Abedini, Giorgia Ditano, Shuffield Seyram Asafo, Giovanni Visci, Francesco Saverio Violante, Carlotta Zunarelli, Giuseppe Verlato, Porru, S, Monaco, Mgl, Spiteri, G, Carta, A, Pezzani, Md, Lippi, G, Gibellini, D, Tacconelli, E, Dalla Vecchia, I, Sala, E, Sansone, E, De Palma, G, Bonfanti, C, Lombardo, M, Terlenghi, L, Pira, E, Mansour, I, Coggiola, M, Ciocan, C, Godono, A, Tardon, A, Rodriguez-Suarez, Mm, Fernandez-Tardon, G, Jimeno-Demuth, Fj, Castro-Delgado, Rv, Iglesias Cabo, T, Scapellato, Ml, Liviero, F, Moretto, A, Mason, P, Pavanello, S, Volpin, A, Vimercati, L, Tafuri, S, De Maria, L, Sponselli, S, Stefanizzi, P, Caputi, A, Gobba, F, Modenese, A, Casolari, L, Garavini, D, D'Elia, C, Mariani, S, Filon, Fl, Cegolon, L, Negro, C, Ronchese, F, Rui, F, De Michieli, P, Murgia, N, Dell'Omo, M, Muzi, G, Fiordi, T, Gambelunghe, A, Folletti, I, Mates, D, Calota, Vc, Neamtu, A, Perseca, O, Staicu, Ca, Voinoiu, A, Fabiánová, E, Bérešová, J, Adamčáková, Zk, Nedela, R, Lesňáková, A, Holčíková, J, Boffetta, P, Abedini, M, Ditano, G, Asafo, S, Visci, G, Violante, F, Zunarelli, C, Verlato, G, Porru S., Monaco M.G.L., Spiteri G., Carta A., Pezzani M.D., Lippi G., Gibellini D., Tacconelli E., Dalla Vecchia I., Sala E., Sansone E., De Palma G., Bonfanti C., Lombardo M., Terlenghi L., Pira E., Mansour I., Coggiola M., Ciocan C., Godono A., Tardon A., Rodriguez-Suarez M.-M., Fernandez-Tardon G., Jimeno-Demuth F.-J., Castro-Delgado R.-V., Iglesias Cabo T., Scapellato M.L., Liviero F., Moretto A., Mason P., Pavanello S., Volpin A., Vimercati L., Tafuri S., De Maria L., Sponselli S., Stefanizzi P., Caputi A., Gobba F., Modenese A., Casolari L., Garavini D., D'Elia C., Mariani S., Filon F.L., Cegolon L., Negro C., Ronchese F., Rui F., De Michieli P., Murgia N., Dell'Omo M., Muzi G., Fiordi T., Gambelunghe A., Folletti I., Mates D., Calota V.C., Neamtu A., Perseca O., Staicu C.A., Voinoiu A., Fabianova E., Beresova J., Adamcakova Z.K., Nedela R., Lesnakova A., Holcikova J., Boffetta P., Abedini M., Ditano G., Asafo S.S., Visci G., Violante F.S., Zunarelli C., and Verlato G.
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Pharmacology ,health worker ,COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 vaccination ,breakthrough infections ,health workers ,occupational and socio-demographic determinants ,Immunology ,breakthrough infection ,Infectious Diseases ,occupational and socio-demographic determinant ,Drug Discovery ,Pharmacology (medical) - Abstract
European Commission, H2020 [101016167]; Regional Health Authority (Azienda Zero), Veneto Region, Italy; Health Research Institute of Asturias (ISPA), Spain, Porru S, Monaco MGL, Spiteri G, Carta A, Pezzani MD, Lippi G, Gibellini D, Tacconelli E, Dalla Vecchia I, Sala E, Sansone E, De Palma G, Bonfanti C, Lombardo M, Terlenghi L, Pira E, Mansour I, Coggiola M, Ciocan C, Godono A, Tardon A, Rodriguez-Suarez MM, Fernandez-Tardon G, Jimeno-Demuth FJ, Castro-Delgado RV, Iglesias Cabo T, Scapellato ML, Liviero F, Moretto A, Mason P, Pavanello S, Volpin A, Vimercati L, Tafuri S, De Maria L, Sponselli S, Stefanizzi P, Caputi A, Gobba F, Modenese A, Casolari L, Garavini D, D'Elia C, Mariani S, Filon FL, Cegolon L, Negro C, Ronchese F, Rui F, De Michieli P, Murgia N, Dell'Omo M, Muzi G, Fiordi T, Gambelunghe A, Folletti I, Mates D, Calota VC, Neamtu A, Perseca O, Staicu CA, Voinoiu A, Fabiánová E, Bérešová J, Adamčáková ZK, Nedela R, Lesňáková A, Holčíková J, Boffetta P, Abedini M, Ditano G, Asafo SS, Visci G, Violante FS, Zunarelli C, Verlato G
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- 2022
26. Determinants of anti-S immune response at 6 months after COVID-19 vaccination in a multicentric European cohort of healthcare workers - ORCHESTRA project
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Collatuzzo, Giulia, Visci, Giovanni, Violante, Francesco S, Porru, Stefano, Spiteri, Gianluca, Monaco, Maria Grazia Lourdes, Larese Fillon, Francesca, Negro, Corrado, Janke, Christian, Castelletti, Noemi, De Palma, Giuseppe, Sansone, Emanuele, Mates, Dana, Teodorescu, Silvia, Fabiánová, Eleonóra, Bérešová, Jana, Vimercati, Luigi, Tafuri, Silvio, Abedini, Mahsa, Ditano, Giorgia, Asafo, Shuffield S, Boffetta, Paolo, Zunarelli, Carlotta, Bonfiglioli, Roberta, Carta, Angela, Verlato, Giuseppe, Lippi, Giuseppe, Gibellini, Davide, Pezzani, Maria Diletta, Torroni, Lorena, Hoelscher, Michael, Wieser, Andreas, Reinkemeyer, Christina, Plank, Michael, Noreña, Ivan, Rubio-Acero, Raquel, Winter, Simon, Leustean, Mihaela, Perseca, Ovidiu, Ipate, Madalina, Agripina, Rascu, Strhársky, Jozef, Hellebrandt, Petra, Križanová, Daniela, Mrázová, Marianna, De Maria, Luigi, Sponselli, Stefania, Stefanizzi, Pasquale, Caputi, Antonio, Collatuzzo G., Visci G., Violante F.S., Porru S., Spiteri G., Monaco M.G.L., Larese Fillon F., Negro C., Janke C., Castelletti N., De Palma G., Sansone E., Mates D., Teodorescu S., Fabianova E., Beresova J., Vimercati L., Tafuri S., Abedini M., Ditano G., Asafo S.S., and Boffetta P.
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COVID-19 Vaccines ,vaccine, COVID – 19, serology, health care workers (HCW), immune response ,Health Personnel ,Immunology ,COVID – 19 ,Vaccination ,health care workers (HCW) ,Immunity ,immune response ,serology ,vaccine ,Infant ,COVID-19 ,Antibodies, Viral ,Antibodies ,Immunoglobulin G ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,Female ,Viral ,Human - Abstract
BackgroundThe duration of immune response to COVID-19 vaccination is of major interest. Our aim was to analyze the determinants of anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG titer at 6 months after 2-dose vaccination in an international cohort of vaccinated healthcare workers (HCWs).MethodsWe analyzed data on levels of anti-SARS-CoV-2 Spike antibodies and sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of 6,327 vaccinated HCWs from 8 centers from Germany, Italy, Romania and Slovakia. Time between 1st dose and serology ranged 150-210 days. Serological levels were log-transformed to account for the skewness of the distribution and normalized by dividing them by center-specific standard errors, obtaining standardized values. We fitted center-specific multivariate regression models to estimate the cohort-specific relative risks (RR) of an increase of 1 standard deviation of log antibody level and corresponding 95% confidence interval (CI), and finally combined them in random-effects meta-analyses.ResultsA 6-month serological response was detected in 99.6% of HCWs. Female sex (RR 1.10, 95%CI 1.00-1.21), past infection (RR 2.26, 95%CI 1.73-2.95) and two vaccine doses (RR 1.50, 95%CI 1.22-1.84) predicted higher IgG titer, contrary to interval since last dose (RR for 10-day increase 0.94, 95%CI 0.91-0.97) and age (RR for 10-year increase 0.87, 95%CI 0.83-0.92). M-RNA-based vaccines (pConclusionsFemale gender, young age, past infection, two vaccine doses, and m-RNA and heterologous vaccination predicted higher antibody level at 6 months. These results corroborate previous findings and offer valuable data for comparison with trends observed with longer follow-ups.
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- 2022
27. Determinants of Anti-S Immune Response at 9 Months after COVID-19 Vaccination in a Multicentric European Cohort of Healthcare Workers-ORCHESTRA Project
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Giulia Collatuzzo, Vittorio Lodi, Daniela Feola, Giuseppe De Palma, Emanuele Sansone, Emma Sala, Christian Janke, Noemi Castelletti, Stefano Porru, Gianluca Spiteri, Maria Grazia Lourdes Monaco, Francesca Larese Filon, Corrado Negro, Luca Cegolon, Jana Beresova, Eleonora Fabianova, Lucia A. Carrasco-Ribelles, Pere Toràn-Monserrat, Marta Maria Rodriguez-Suarez, Guillermo Fernandez-Tardon, Shuffield S. Asafo, Giorgia Ditano, Mahsa Abedini, Paolo Boffetta, Collatuzzo, G, Lodi, V, Feola, D, De Palma, G, Sansone, E, Sala, E, Janke, C, Castelletti, N, Porru, S, Spiteri, G, Monaco, Mgl, Larese Filon, F, Negro, C, Cegolon, L, Beresova, J, Fabianova, E, Carrasco-Ribelles, La, Toràn-Monserrat, P, Rodriguez-Suarez, Mm, Fernandez-Tardon, G, Asafo, S, Ditano, G, Abedini, M, and Boffetta, P.
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Infectious Diseases ,temporal trends ,antibody level ,temporal trend ,Virology ,COVID-19 ,vaccine ,serology ,immunization - Abstract
This project has received funding from the EU Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the ORCHESTRA project Grant Agreement No. 101016167. The cohort from Verona is funded by the Regional Health Authority (Azienda Zero), Veneto Region, Italy., Collatuzzo G., Lodi V., Feola D., De Palma G., Sansone E., Sala E., Janke C., Castelletti N., Porru S., Spiteri G., Monaco M.G.L., Larese Filon F., Negro C., Cegolon L., Beresova J., Fabianova E., Carrasco-Ribelles L.A., Toràn-Monserrat P., Rodriguez-Suarez M.M., Fernandez-Tardon G., Asafo S.S., Ditano G., Abedini M., Boffetta P.
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- 2022
28. Gastritis and gastroesophageal reflux disease are strongly associated with non-allergic nasal disorders
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Gianluca Spiteri, Eliana Finocchio, Salvatore Battaglia, Marcello Ferrari, Francesca Sanna, Nicola Murgia, Giuseppe Verlato, Leonardo Antonicelli, Pierpaolo Marchetti, Pietro Pirina, Angelo Corsico, Mario Olivieri, Francesca Locatelli, Roberta Vesentini, Roberto Bono, Finocchio E., Locatelli F., Sanna F., Vesentini R., Marchetti P., Spiteri G., Antonicelli L., Battaglia S., Bono R., Corsico A.G., Ferrari M., Murgia N., Pirina P., Olivieri M., and Verlato G.
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Male ,Non-allergic rhinitis ,Gastroesophageal reflux disease ,Gastroenterology ,Allergic rhinitis ,0302 clinical medicine ,Prevalence ,Non-allergic rhiniti ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Sinusitis ,Rhinitis ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,Middle Aged ,Gastritit ,Italy ,Gastritis ,Gastroesophageal Reflux ,Female ,Public Health ,medicine.symptom ,Research Article ,Adult ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Gastritits ,Settore MED/10 - Malattie Dell'Apparato Respiratorio ,NO ,Hiatal hernia ,Gastritits, Gastroesophageal refux disease, Allergic rhinitis, Non-allergic rhinitis, Sinusitis ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,Allergic rhiniti ,medicine ,Humans ,Gastroesophageal refux disease ,education ,Aged ,lcsh:RC705-779 ,business.industry ,lcsh:Diseases of the respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,Rhinitis, Allergic ,Sinusiti ,digestive system diseases ,030228 respiratory system ,Relative risk ,Chronic Disease ,GERD ,Sinusitis, Public Health ,business ,Esophagitis - Abstract
BackgroundGastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) has been reported to be significantly associated with chronic rhinosinusitis, but the strength of the association is still debated.AimsTo evaluate the strength of the association between gastritis/GERD and non-allergic rhinitis (NAR)/allergic rhinitis (AR)/sinusitis.MethodsWe investigated 2887 subjects aged 20–84 years, who underwent a clinical visit in seven Italian centres (Ancona, Palermo, Pavia, Terni, Sassari, Torino, Verona) within the study on Gene Environment Interactions in Respiratory Diseases, a population-based multicase-control study between 2008 and 2014. Subjects were asked if they had doctor-diagnosed “gastritis or stomach ulcer (confirmed by gastroscopy)” or “gastroesophageal reflux disease, hiatal hernia or esophagitis”. The association between NAR/AR/sinusitis and either gastritis or GERD was evaluated through relative risk ratios (RRR) by multinomial logistic regression.ResultsThe prevalence of gastritis/GERD increased from subjects without nasal disturbances (22.8% = 323/1414) to subjects with AR (25.8% = 152/590) and further to subjects with NAR (36.7% = 69/188) or sinusitis (39.9% = 276/691). When adjusting for centre, sex, age, education level, BMI, smoking habits and alcohol intake, the combination of gastritis and GERD was associated with a four-fold increase in the risk of NAR (RRR = 3.80, 95% CI 2.56–5.62) and sinusitis (RRR = 3.70, 2.62–5.23) with respect to controls, and with a much smaller increase in the risk of AR (RRR = 1.79, 1.37–2.35)..ConclusionThe study confirmed the association between gastritis/GERD and nasal disturbances, which is stronger for NAR and sinusitis than for AR.
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- 2021
29. Focus, vigilance, resilience: towards stronger infectious disease surveillance, threat detection and response in the EU/EEA.
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Zucs P, Beauté J, Palm D, and Spiteri G
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- Humans, Population Surveillance, Europe epidemiology, Disease Outbreaks prevention & control, Sentinel Surveillance, Communicable Disease Control methods, Public Health Surveillance methods, European Union, Communicable Diseases epidemiology, Communicable Diseases diagnosis, Public Health
- Abstract
This perspective summarises and explains the long-term surveillance framework 2021-2027 for infectious diseases in the European Union/European Economic Area (EU/EEA) published in April 2023. It shows how shortcomings in the areas of public health focus, vigilance and resilience will be addressed through specific strategies in the coming years and how these strategies will lead to stronger surveillance systems for early detection and monitoring of public health threats as well as informing their effective prevention and control. A sharper public health focus is expected from a more targeted list of notifiable diseases, strictly public-health-objective-driven surveillance standards, and consequently, leaner surveillance systems. Vigilance should improve through mandatory event reporting, more automated epidemic intelligence processing and increased use of genomic surveillance. Finally, EU/EEA surveillance systems should become more resilient by modernising the underlying information technology infrastructure, expanding the influenza sentinel surveillance system to other respiratory viruses for better pandemic preparedness, and increasingly exploiting potentially more robust alternative data sources, such as electronic health records and wastewater surveillance. Continued close collaboration across EU/EEA countries will be key to ensuring the full implementation of this surveillance framework and more effective disease prevention and control.
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- 2024
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30. SARS-CoV-2 Positivity in Foreign-Born Adults: A Retrospective Study in Verona, Northeast Italy.
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Lotti V, Spiteri G, Caliskan G, Monaco MGL, Gibellini D, Verlato G, and Porru S
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We compared SARS-CoV-2 positivity between the foreign-born adult working population and Italians living in the Verona area to investigate whether being a foreign-born adult could confer an increased risk of infection or lead to a diagnostic delay. The present study included 105,774 subjects, aged 18-65 years, tested for SARS-CoV-2 by nasopharyngeal swabs and analyzed at the University Hospital of Verona between January 2020 and September 2022. A logistic regression model was used, controlling for gender, age, time of sampling, and source of referral. A higher proportion of SARS-CoV-2 positivity in Italian (30.09%) than in foreign-born (25.61%) adults was reported, with a higher proportion of SARS-CoV-2 positivity in men than women in both cohorts analyzed. The difference in swab positivity among Italian and foreign-born adults was the highest in people aged 18-29 years (31.5% vs. 23.3%) and tended to disappear thereafter. Swab positivity became comparable between Italian and foreign-born adults during the vaccination campaign. Multivariable analysis confirmed the lower risk of swab positivity among foreign-born adults (OR = 0.85, 95% CI 0.82-0.89). In the Verona area, foreign-born adults showed a lower rate of SARS-CoV-2 positivity than the native population, likely because of underdiagnosis. Hence, public health should increase attention toward these particularly vulnerable populations., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
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- 2024
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31. A Multi-Center Study Investigating Long COVID-19 in Healthcare Workers from North-Eastern Italy: Prevalence, Risk Factors and the Impact of Pre-Existing Humoral Immunity-ORCHESTRA Project.
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Cegolon L, Mauro M, Sansone D, Tassinari A, Gobba FM, Modenese A, Casolari L, Liviero F, Pavanello S, Scapellato ML, Taus F, Carta A, Spiteri G, Monaco MGL, Porru S, and Larese Filon F
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Introduction: The impact of long-COVID-19 syndrome is rather variable, since it is influenced by several residual confounders. This study aimed to investigate the prevalence of long COVID-19 in healthcare workers (HCWs) from four university hospitals in north-eastern Italy: Trieste, Padua, Verona, and Modena-Reggio Emilia. Methods: During the period June 2022-August 2022, HCWs were surveyed for past COVID-19 infections, medical history, and any acute as well as post-COVID-19 symptoms. The prevalence of long COVID-19 was estimated at 30-60 days or 61+ days since first negative swab following first and second COVID-19 episode. Furthermore, the risk of long COVID-19 was investigated by multivariable logistic regression. Results were expressed as the adjusted odds ratio (aOR) with a 95% confidence interval (95%CI). Results: 5432 HCWs returned a usable questionnaire: 2401 were infected with SARS-CoV-2 at least once, 230 were infected at least twice, and 8 were infected three times. The prevalence of long COVID-19 after a primary COVID-19 infection was 24.0% at 30-60 days versus 16.3% at 61+ days, and 10.5% against 5.5% after the second SARS-CoV-2 event. The most frequent symptoms after a first COVID-19 event were asthenia (30.3%), followed by myalgia (13.7%), cough (12.4%), dyspnea (10.2%), concentration deficit (8.1%), headache (7.3%), and anosmia (6.5%), in decreasing order of prevalence. The risk of long COVID-19 at 30-60 days was significantly higher in HCWs hospitalized for COVID-19 (aOR = 3.34; 95%CI: 1.62; 6.89), those infected with SARS-CoV-2 during the early pandemic waves-namely the Wuhan (aOR = 2.16; 95%CI: 1.14; 4.09) or Alpha (aOR= 2.05; 95%CI: 1.25; 3.38) transmission periods-and progressively increasing with viral shedding time (VST), especially 15+ days (aOR = 3.20; 95%CI: 2.07; 4.94). Further determinants of long COVID-19 at 30-60 days since primary COVID-19 event were female sex (aOR = 1.91; 95%CI: 1.30; 2.80), age >40 years, abnormal BMI, or administrative services (reference category). In contrast, HCWs vaccinated with two doses before their primary infection (aOR = 0.57; 95%CI: 0.34; 0.94), undergraduate students, or postgraduate medical trainees were less likely to experience long COVID-19 at 30-60 days. Apart from pandemic waves, the main determinants of long COVID-19 at 30-60 days were confirmed at 61+ days. Conclusions: The risk of long COVID-19 following primary infection increased with the severity of acute disease and VST, especially during the initial pandemic waves, when more virulent viral strains were circulating, and susceptibility to SARS-CoV-2 was higher since most HCWs had not been infected yet, COVID-19 vaccines were still not available, and/or vaccination coverage was still building up. The risk of long COVID-19 therefore decreased inversely with humoral immunity at the individual level. Nevertheless, the prevalence of long COVID-19 was remarkably lower after SARS-CoV-2 reinfections regardless of vaccination status, suggesting that hybrid humoral immunity did not increase protection against the syndrome compared to immunity mounted by either natural infection or vaccination separately. Since the risk of long COVID-19 is currently low with Omicron and patients who developed the syndrome following SARS-CoV-2 infection in the early pandemic waves tend to return to a state of full health with time, a cost-effective approach to screen post-COVID-19 symptoms during the Omicron time could be restricted to vulnerable individuals developing severe disease and/or with prolonged VST.
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- 2023
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32. Determinants of Anti-S Immune Response at 12 Months after SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination in a Multicentric European Cohort of Healthcare Workers-ORCHESTRA Project.
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Leomanni L, Collatuzzo G, Sansone E, Sala E, De Palma G, Porru S, Spiteri G, Monaco MGL, Basso D, Pavanello S, Scapellato ML, Larese Filon F, Cegolon L, Mauro M, Lodi V, Lazzarotto T, Noreña I, Reinkemeyer C, Giang LTT, Fabiánová E, Strhársky J, Dell'Omo M, Murgia N, Carrasco-Ribelles LA, Violán C, Mates D, Rascu A, Vimercati L, De Maria L, Asafo SS, Ditano G, Abedini M, and Boffetta P
- Abstract
Background: The effectiveness of the immunity provided by SARS-CoV-2 vaccines is an important public health issue. We analyzed the determinants of 12-month serology in a multicenter European cohort of vaccinated healthcare workers (HCW)., Methods: We analyzed the sociodemographic characteristics and levels of anti-SARS-CoV-2 spike antibodies (IgG) in a cohort of 16,101 vaccinated HCW from eleven centers in Germany, Italy, Romania, Slovakia and Spain. Considering the skewness of the distribution, the serological levels were transformed using log or cubic standardization and normalized by dividing them by center-specific standard errors. We fitted center-specific multivariate regression models to estimate the cohort-specific relative risks (RR) of an increase of one standard deviation of log or cubic antibody level and the corresponding 95% confidence interval (CI) for different factors and combined them in random-effects meta-analyses., Results: We included 16,101 HCW in the analysis. A high antibody level was positively associated with age (RR = 1.04, 95% CI = 1.00-1.08 per 10-year increase), previous infection (RR = 1.78, 95% CI 1.29-2.45) and use of Spikevax [Moderna] with combinations compared to Comirnaty [BioNTech/Pfizer] (RR = 1.07, 95% CI 0.97-1.19) and was negatively associated with the time since last vaccine (RR = 0.94, 95% CI 0.91-0.98 per 30-day increase)., Conclusions: These results provide insight about vaccine-induced immunity to SARS-CoV-2, an analysis of its determinants and quantification of the antibody decay trend with time since vaccination.
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- 2023
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33. Incidence and Determinants of Symptomatic and Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 Breakthrough Infections After Booster Dose in a Large European Multicentric Cohort of Health Workers-ORCHESTRA Project.
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Porru S, Monaco MGL, Spiteri G, Carta A, Caliskan G, Violán C, Torán-Monserrat P, Vimercati L, Tafuri S, Boffetta P, Violante FS, Sala E, Sansone E, Gobba F, Casolari L, Wieser A, Janke C, Tardon A, Rodriguez-Suarez MM, Liviero F, Scapellato ML, dell'Omo M, Murgia N, Mates D, Calota VC, Strhársky J, Mrázová M, Pira E, Godono A, Magnano GC, Negro C, and Verlato G
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- Female, Humans, Incidence, SARS-CoV-2, BNT162 Vaccine, Breakthrough Infections, Longitudinal Studies, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control
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Background: SARS-CoV-2 breakthrough infections (BI) after vaccine booster dose are a relevant public health issue., Methods: Multicentric longitudinal cohort study within the ORCHESTRA project, involving 63,516 health workers (HW) from 14 European settings. The study investigated the cumulative incidence of SARS-CoV-2 BI after booster dose and its correlation with age, sex, job title, previous infection, and time since third dose., Results: 13,093 (20.6%) BI were observed. The cumulative incidence of BI was higher in women and in HW aged < 50 years, but nearly halved after 60 years. Nurses experienced the highest BI incidence, and administrative staff experienced the lowest. The BI incidence was higher in immunosuppressed HW (28.6%) vs others (24.9%). When controlling for gender, age, job title and infection before booster, heterologous vaccination reduced BI incidence with respect to the BNT162b2 mRNA vaccine [Odds Ratio (OR) 0.69, 95% CI 0.63-0.76]. Previous infection protected against asymptomatic infection [Relative Risk Ratio (RRR) of recent infection vs no infection 0.53, 95% CI 0.23-1.20] and even more against symptomatic infections [RRR 0.11, 95% CI 0.05-0.25]. Symptomatic infections increased from 70.5% in HW receiving the booster dose since < 64 days to 86.2% when time elapsed was > 130 days., Conclusions: The risk of BI after booster is significantly reduced by previous infection, heterologous vaccination, and older ages. Immunosuppression is relevant for increased BI incidence. Time elapsed from booster affects BI severity, confirming the public health usefulness of booster. Further research should focus on BI trend after 4th dose and its relationship with time variables across the epidemics., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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34. Multimorbidity and Serological Response to SARS-CoV-2 Nine Months after 1st Vaccine Dose: European Cohort of Healthcare Workers-Orchestra Project.
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Violán C, Carrasco-Ribelles LA, Collatuzzo G, Ditano G, Abedini M, Janke C, Reinkemeyer C, Giang LTT, Liviero F, Scapellato ML, Mauro M, Rui F, Porru S, Spiteri G, Monaco MGL, Carta A, Otelea M, Rascu A, Fabiánová E, Klöslová Z, Boffetta P, and Torán-Monserrat P
- Abstract
Understanding antibody persistence concerning multimorbidity is crucial for vaccination policies. Our goal is to assess the link between multimorbidity and serological response to SARS-CoV-2 nine months post-first vaccine. We analyzed Healthcare Workers (HCWs) from three cohorts from Italy, and one each from Germany, Romania, Slovakia, and Spain. Seven groups of chronic diseases were analyzed. We included 2941 HCWs (78.5% female, 73.4% ≥ 40 years old). Multimorbidity was present in 6.9% of HCWs. The prevalence of each chronic condition ranged between 1.9% (cancer) to 10.3% (allergies). Two regression models were fitted, one considering the chronic conditions groups and the other considering whether HCWs had diseases from ≥2 groups. Multimorbidity was present in 6.9% of HCWs, and higher 9-months post-vaccine anti-S levels were significantly associated with having received three doses of the vaccine (RR = 2.45, CI = 1.92-3.13) and with having a prior COVID-19 infection (RR = 2.30, CI = 2.15-2.46). Conversely, lower levels were associated with higher age (RR = 0.94, CI = 0.91-0.96), more time since the last vaccine dose (RR = 0.95, CI = 0.94-0.96), and multimorbidity (RR = 0.89, CI = 0.80-1.00). Hypertension is significantly associated with lower anti-S levels (RR = 0.87, CI = 0.80-0.95). The serological response to vaccines is more inadequate in individuals with multimorbidity.
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- 2023
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35. Factors Associated with SARS-CoV-2 Infection before Vaccination among European Health Care Workers.
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Mansour I, Godono A, Sansone E, Visci G, Spiteri G, Lourdes Monaco MG, Mates D, Rascu A, Duval X, Pira E, Ciocan C, Violante F, Lodi V, De Palma G, Sala E, Dell'Olmo M, Negro C, Casolari L, Abedini M, Ditano G, Asafo S, Boffetta P, and Working Group OW
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- Humans, SARS-CoV-2, Vaccination, Health Personnel, Pandemics, COVID-19
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Background: Health care workers (HCWs) were on the frontline of the current pandemic. We aimed at identifying determinants of SARS-CoV-2 infection and the effectiveness of personal protection equipment (PPE) worn by HCWs before vaccination., Methods: We abstracted data on SARS-CoV-2 infection based on positive PCR results and sociodemographic characteristics of 38,793 HCWs from public hospitals and public health authorities from 10 European centers. We fitted cohort-specific multivariate logistic regression models to identify determinants of infection and combined the results using random-effects meta-analyses., Results: The overall prevalence of infection before vaccination among HCWs was 9.58%. Infection was associated with the presence of selected symptoms; no association was found between sociodemographic factors and increased risk of infection. The use of PPE and particularly FFP2/FFP3 masks had a different protective effect during the first and second waves of the COVID pandemic., Conclusions: The study provides evidence that mask use was the most effective PPE in preventing SARS-CoV-2 infection among HCWs.
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- 2023
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36. Corrigendum: Temporal trends of COVID-19 antibodies in vaccinated healthcare workers undergoing repeated serological sampling: an individual-level analysis within 13 months in the ORCHESTRA cohort.
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Collatuzzo G, De Palma G, Violante FS, Porru S, Filon FL, Fabianova E, Violán C, Vimercati L, Leustean M, Rodriguez-Suarez MM, Sansone E, Sala E, Zunarelli C, Lodi V, Monaco MGL, Spiteri G, Negro C, Beresova J, Carrasco-Ribelles LA, Tafuri S, Asafo SS, Ditano G, Abedini M, and Boffetta P
- Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.1079884.]., (Copyright © 2023 Collatuzzo, De Palma, Violante, Porru, Filon, Fabianova, Violán, Vimercati, Leustean, Rodriguez-Suarez, Sansone, Sala, Zunarelli, Lodi, Monaco, Spiteri, Negro, Beresova, Carrasco-Ribelles, Tafuri, Asafo, Ditano, Abedini and Boffetta.)
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- 2023
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37. Reduction of Excessive Dietary Sodium Consumption: Effectiveness of a Prevention Intervention among Health Workers in a Large Italian Hospital.
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Spiteri G, Monaco MGL, Carta A, Torroni L, Taus F, Verlato G, and Porru S
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- Male, Humans, Sodium Chloride, Dietary, Blood Pressure, Obesity epidemiology, Obesity prevention & control, Obesity complications, Hospitals, Sodium, Dietary, Hypertension epidemiology, Hypertension prevention & control, Hypertension etiology
- Abstract
Excessive salt consumption is one of the leading causes of high blood pressure. Worldwide salt intake largely exceeds the WHO recommended amount. This study aimed to evaluate the prevalence of high salt consumers and the effectiveness of a short-term workplace educational intervention among health workers. An online survey, assessing daily salt consumption through the MINISAL-SIIA questionnaire, was sent to the 4911 health workers employed by the University Hospital of Verona, Italy. Health workers who had a high (total score ≥ 10) or moderate (total score = 8/9) salt consumption associated with obesity or arterial hypertension were invited to undergo a medical examination and a short individual counselling session. A total of 1665 health workers (34.0%) completed the online questionnaire; 40.9% and 12.6% had moderate and high salt intake, respectively. High salt intake was more prevalent in men, current and past smokers, and obese and overweight subjects. In 95 participants completing the clinical phase, median daily salt consumption decreased from 10 (p25-p75 8-11) to 7 g (6-8) ( p < 0.001), systolic blood pressure from 130 (120-140) to 120 (120-130) mmHg and weight from 78 (62-87) to 75 (62-86) kg. More than half of health workers had an excessive salt intake. However, a brief educational intervention in the healthcare working setting can substantially reduce unhealthy dietary habits, fostering weight loss and blood pressure control. Studies with a longer follow-up are needed to evaluate the persistence over time of these effects.
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- 2023
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38. Temporal trends of COVID-19 antibodies in vaccinated healthcare workers undergoing repeated serological sampling: An individual-level analysis within 13 months in the ORCHESTRA cohort.
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Collatuzzo G, De Palma G, Violante FS, Porru S, Larese Filon F, Fabianova E, Violán C, Vimercati L, Leustean M, Rodriguez-Suarez MM, Sansone E, Sala E, Zunarelli C, Lodi V, Monaco MGL, Spiteri G, Negro C, Beresova J, Carrasco-Ribelles LA, Tafuri S, Asafo SS, Ditano G, Abedini M, and Boffetta P
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- Humans, Infant, Antibodies, Health Personnel, Italy, COVID-19 Vaccines, COVID-19 prevention & control
- Abstract
Short Summary: We investigated changes in serologic measurements after COVID-19 vaccination in 19,422 subjects. An individual-level analysis was performed on standardized measurements. Age, infection, vaccine doses, time between doses and serologies, and vaccine type were associated with changes in serologic levels within 13 months., Background: Persistence of vaccine immunization is key for COVID-19 prevention., Methods: We investigated the difference between two serologic measurements of anti-COVID-19 S1 antibodies in an individual-level analysis on 19,422 vaccinated healthcare workers (HCW) from Italy, Spain, Romania, and Slovakia, tested within 13 months from first dose. Differences in serologic levels were divided by the standard error of the cohort-specific distribution, obtaining standardized measurements. We fitted multivariate linear regression models to identify predictors of difference between two measurements., Results: We observed a progressively decreasing difference in serologic levels from <30 days to 210-240 days. Age was associated with an increased difference in serologic levels. There was a greater difference between the two serologic measurements in infected HCW than in HCW who had never been infected; before the first measurement, infected HCW had a relative risk (RR) of 0.81 for one standard deviation in the difference [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.78-0.85]. The RRs for a 30-day increase in time between first dose and first serology, and between the two serologies, were 1.08 (95% CI 1.07-1.10) and 1.04 (95% CI 1.03-1.05), respectively. The first measurement was a strong predictor of subsequent antibody decrease (RR 1.60; 95% CI 1.56-1.64). Compared with Comirnaty, Spikevax (RR 0.83, 95% CI 0.75-0.92) and mixed vaccines (RR 0.61, 95% CI 0.51-0.74) were smaller decrease in serological level (RR 0.46; 95% CI 0.40-0.54)., Conclusions: Age, COVID-19 infection, number of doses, time between first dose and first serology, time between serologies, and type of vaccine were associated with differences between the two serologic measurements within a 13-month period., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Collatuzzo, De Palma, Violante, Porru, Larese Filon, Fabianova, Violán, Vimercati, Leustean, Rodriguez-Suarez, Sansone, Sala, Zunarelli, Lodi, Monaco, Spiteri, Negro, Beresova, Carrasco-Ribelles, Tafuri, Asafo, Ditano, Abedini and Boffetta.)
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- 2023
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39. Determinants of Anti-S Immune Response at 9 Months after COVID-19 Vaccination in a Multicentric European Cohort of Healthcare Workers-ORCHESTRA Project.
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Collatuzzo G, Lodi V, Feola D, De Palma G, Sansone E, Sala E, Janke C, Castelletti N, Porru S, Spiteri G, Monaco MGL, Larese Filon F, Negro C, Cegolon L, Beresova J, Fabianova E, Carrasco-Ribelles LA, Toràn-Monserrat P, Rodriguez-Suarez MM, Fernandez-Tardon G, Asafo SS, Ditano G, Abedini M, and Boffetta P
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- Female, Humans, Antibodies, Viral, Health Personnel, Immunity, Vaccination, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 Vaccines
- Abstract
Background: The persistence of antibody levels after COVID-19 vaccination has public health relevance. We analyzed the determinants of quantitative serology at 9 months after vaccination in a multicenter cohort. Methods: We analyzed data on anti-SARS-CoV-2 spike antibody levels at 9 months from the first dose of vaccinated HCW from eight centers in Italy, Germany, Spain, Romania and Slovakia. Serological levels were log-transformed to account for the skewness of the distribution and normalized by dividing them by center-specific standard errors. We fitted center-specific multivariate regression models to estimate the cohort-specific relative risks (RR) of an increase of one standard deviation of log antibody level and the corresponding 95% confidence interval (CI), and combined them in random-effects meta-analyses. Finally, we conducted a trend analysis of 1 to 7 months' serology within one cohort. Results : We included 20,216 HCW with up to two vaccine doses and showed that high antibody levels were associated with female sex ( p = 0.01), age (RR = 0.87, 95% CI = 0.86-0.88 per 10-year increase), 10-day increase in time since last vaccine (RR = 0.97, 95% CI 0.97-0.98), previous infection (3.03, 95% CI = 2.92-3.13), two vaccine doses (RR = 1.22, 95% CI = 1.09-1.36), use of Spikevax (OR = 1.51, 95% CI = 1.39-1.64), Vaxzevria (OR = 0.57, 95% CI = 0.44-0.73) or heterologous vaccination (OR = 1.33, 95% CI = 1.12-1.57), compared to Comirnaty. The trend in the Bologna cohort, based on 3979 measurements, showed a decrease in mean standardized antibody level from 8.17 to 7.06 (1-7 months, p for trend 0.005). Conclusions: Our findings corroborate current knowledge on the determinants of COVID-19 vaccine-induced immunity and declining trend with time.
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- 2022
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40. SARS-CoV-2 and Its Variants in Thrice-Infected Health Workers: A Case Series from an Italian University Hospital.
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Monaco MGL, Spiteri G, Caliskan G, Lotti V, Carta A, Gibellini D, Verlato G, and Porru S
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Hospitals, SARS-CoV-2 genetics, COVID-19 epidemiology
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Background: We described a SARS-CoV-2 thrice-infected case series in health workers (HW) to evaluate patient and virus variants and lineages and collect information on variables associated with multiple infections., Methods: A retrospective analysis of clinical and laboratory characteristics of SARS-CoV-2 thrice-infected individuals was carried out in Verona University Hospital, concurrent with the ORCHESTRA project. Variant analysis was conducted on a subset of available specimens., Results: Twelve HW out of 7368 were thrice infected (0.16%). Symptomatic infections were reported in 63.6%, 54.5% and 72.7% of the first, second and third infections, respectively. Nine subjects were fully vaccinated at the time of the third infection, and five had an additional booster dose. The mean time to second infection was 349.6 days (95% CI, 138-443); the mean interval between the second and third infection was 223.5 days (95% CI, 108-530) ( p = 0.032). In three cases, the second and third infections were caused by the Omicron variant, but different lineages were detected when the second vs third infections were sequenced., Conclusions: This case series confirms evidence of multiple reinfections with SARS-CoV-2, even from the same variant, in vaccinated HW. These results reinforce the need for continued infection-specific prevention measures in previously infected and reinfected HW.
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- 2022
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41. High monkeypox vaccine acceptance among male users of smartphone-based online gay-dating apps in Europe, 30 July to 12 August 2022.
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Reyes-Urueña J, D'Ambrosio A, Croci R, Bluemel B, Cenciarelli O, Pharris A, Dukers-Muijrers N, Nutland W, Niaupari S, Badran J, Spiteri G, and Noori T
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Male, Homosexuality, Male, Smartphone, Diphtheria-Tetanus-Pertussis Vaccine, BCG Vaccine, Bayes Theorem, Measles-Mumps-Rubella Vaccine, Cross-Sectional Studies, Europe, Mpox, Monkeypox, Smallpox Vaccine, AIDS Vaccines, Influenza Vaccines, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Vaccines, SAIDS Vaccines, Sexual and Gender Minorities, Papillomavirus Vaccines
- Abstract
We assess monkeypox vaccination acceptance among male adults in the European Region. We conducted an online survey through two dating apps targeting men who have sex with men, from 30 July to 12 August 2022. We developed Bayesian hierarchical logistic regression models to investigate monkeypox vaccination acceptance. Overall crude vaccination acceptance was 82% and higher in north-western compared to south-eastern European regions. Acceptance strongly rose with perception of increased disease severity and transmission risk, and in individuals linked to healthcare.
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- 2022
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42. Determinants of anti-S immune response at 6 months after COVID-19 vaccination in a multicentric European cohort of healthcare workers - ORCHESTRA project.
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Collatuzzo G, Visci G, Violante FS, Porru S, Spiteri G, Monaco MGL, Larese Fillon F, Negro C, Janke C, Castelletti N, De Palma G, Sansone E, Mates D, Teodorescu S, Fabiánová E, Bérešová J, Vimercati L, Tafuri S, Abedini M, Ditano G, Asafo SS, and Boffetta P
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- Antibodies, Viral, Female, Health Personnel, Humans, Immunity, Immunoglobulin G, Infant, Vaccination, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 Vaccines
- Abstract
Background: The duration of immune response to COVID-19 vaccination is of major interest. Our aim was to analyze the determinants of anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG titer at 6 months after 2-dose vaccination in an international cohort of vaccinated healthcare workers (HCWs)., Methods: We analyzed data on levels of anti-SARS-CoV-2 Spike antibodies and sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of 6,327 vaccinated HCWs from 8 centers from Germany, Italy, Romania and Slovakia. Time between 1
st dose and serology ranged 150-210 days. Serological levels were log-transformed to account for the skewness of the distribution and normalized by dividing them by center-specific standard errors, obtaining standardized values. We fitted center-specific multivariate regression models to estimate the cohort-specific relative risks (RR) of an increase of 1 standard deviation of log antibody level and corresponding 95% confidence interval (CI), and finally combined them in random-effects meta-analyses., Results: A 6-month serological response was detected in 99.6% of HCWs. Female sex (RR 1.10, 95%CI 1.00-1.21), past infection (RR 2.26, 95%CI 1.73-2.95) and two vaccine doses (RR 1.50, 95%CI 1.22-1.84) predicted higher IgG titer, contrary to interval since last dose (RR for 10-day increase 0.94, 95%CI 0.91-0.97) and age (RR for 10-year increase 0.87, 95%CI 0.83-0.92). M-RNA-based vaccines (p<0.001) and heterologous vaccination (RR 2.46, 95%CI 1.87-3.24, one cohort) were associated with increased antibody levels., Conclusions: Female gender, young age, past infection, two vaccine doses, and m-RNA and heterologous vaccination predicted higher antibody level at 6 months. These results corroborate previous findings and offer valuable data for comparison with trends observed with longer follow-ups., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Collatuzzo, Visci, Violante, Porru, Spiteri, Monaco, Larese Fillon, Negro, Janke, Castelletti, De Palma, Sansone, Mates, Teodorescu, Fabiánová, Bérešová, Vimercati, Tafuri, Abedini, Ditano, Asafo, Boffetta and Orchestra WP5 Working Group.)- Published
- 2022
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43. Usefulness and Limitations of Anti-S IgG Assay in Detecting Previous SARS-CoV-2 Breakthrough Infection in Fully Vaccinated Healthcare Workers.
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Spiteri G, Monaco MGL, Caliskan G, Carta A, Pezzani MD, Lippi G, Gibellini D, Verlato G, and Porru S
- Abstract
Introduction: The anti-spike (S) IgG assay is the most widely used method to assess the immunological response to COVID-19 vaccination. Several studies showed that subjects with perivaccination infection have higher anti-S IgG titers. However, a cut-off has not yet been identified so far for distinguishing infected subjects after vaccination. This study thus evaluates the performance of the anti-S IgG assay in identifying subjects with breakthrough infections (BIs) and its potential usefulness for screening healthcare workers (HCWs). Methods: Out of 6400 HCWs of the University Hospital of Verona vaccinated with two doses of BNT162b2, 4462 never infected before subjects who had completed primary vaccination were tested for IgG anti-S 6 to 9 months after the second dose. Of these, 59 (1.3%) had a BI. The discriminant power of IgG anti-S in detecting previous breakthrough infection was tested by constructing receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves. Results: The discriminant power for BI was rather good (area under the curve (AUC), 0.78) and increased with decreasing time elapsed between antibody titer assessment and previous SARS-CoV-2 infection. Accuracy (AUC) sensitivity increased from 0.78 (95% CI 0.70−0.85) for BI in the previous six months to 0.83 (95% CI 0.67−0.99) for those in the previous two months, and from 0.68 to 0.80, respectively. The specificity (0.86) and optimal cut-off (935 BAU/mL) remained unchanged. However, BI were rather rare (1.3%), so the positive predictive value (PPV) was low. Only 40 of the 664 HCWs with antibody titer > 935 BAU/mL had previously confirmed BI, yielding a PPV of only 6.0%. When adopting as cut-off the 90th percentile (1180 BAU/mL), PPV increased to 7.9% (35/441). Conclusions: The anti-S IgG assay displayed good sensitivity and specificity in discriminating subjects with BI, especially in recent periods. However, BIs were rare among HCWs, so that the anti-S IgG assay may have low PPV in this setting, thus limiting the usefulness of this test as a screening tool for HCWs. Further studies are needed to identify more effective markers of a previous infection in vaccinated subjects.
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- 2022
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44. SARS-CoV-2 Breakthrough Infections: Incidence and Risk Factors in a Large European Multicentric Cohort of Health Workers.
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Porru S, Monaco MGL, Spiteri G, Carta A, Pezzani MD, Lippi G, Gibellini D, Tacconelli E, Dalla Vecchia I, Sala E, Sansone E, De Palma G, Bonfanti C, Lombardo M, Terlenghi L, Pira E, Mansour I, Coggiola M, Ciocan C, Godono A, Tardon A, Rodriguez-Suarez MM, Fernandez-Tardon G, Jimeno-Demuth FJ, Castro-Delgado RV, Iglesias Cabo T, Scapellato ML, Liviero F, Moretto A, Mason P, Pavanello S, Volpin A, Vimercati L, Tafuri S, De Maria L, Sponselli S, Stefanizzi P, Caputi A, Gobba F, Modenese A, Casolari L, Garavini D, D'Elia C, Mariani S, Filon FL, Cegolon L, Negro C, Ronchese F, Rui F, De Michieli P, Murgia N, Dell'Omo M, Muzi G, Fiordi T, Gambelunghe A, Folletti I, Mates D, Calota VC, Neamtu A, Perseca O, Staicu CA, Voinoiu A, Fabiánová E, Bérešová J, Adamčáková ZK, Nedela R, Lesňáková A, Holčíková J, Boffetta P, Abedini M, Ditano G, Asafo SS, Visci G, Violante FS, Zunarelli C, and Verlato G
- Abstract
Background: The research aimed to investigate the incidence of SARS-CoV-2 breakthrough infections and their determinants in a large European cohort of more than 60,000 health workers., Methods: A multicentric retrospective cohort study, involving 12 European centers, was carried out within the ORCHESTRA project, collecting data up to 18 November 2021 on fully vaccinated health workers. The cumulative incidence of SARS-CoV-2 breakthrough infections was investigated with its association with occupational and social-demographic characteristics (age, sex, job title, previous SARS-CoV-2 infection, antibody titer levels, and time from the vaccination course completion)., Results: Among 64,172 health workers from 12 European health centers, 797 breakthrough infections were observed (cumulative incidence of 1.2%). The primary analysis using individual data on 8 out of 12 centers showed that age and previous infection significantly modified breakthrough infection rates. In the meta-analysis of aggregated data from all centers, previous SARS-CoV-2 infection and the standardized antibody titer were inversely related to the risk of breakthrough infection ( p = 0.008 and p = 0.007, respectively)., Conclusion: The inverse correlation of antibody titer with the risk of breakthrough infection supports the evidence that vaccination plays a primary role in infection prevention, especially in health workers. Cellular immunity, previous clinical conditions, and vaccination timing should be further investigated.
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- 2022
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45. Significant increase in azithromycin "resistance" and susceptibility to ceftriaxone and cefixime in Neisseria gonorrhoeae isolates in 26 European countries, 2019.
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Day MJ, Jacobsson S, Spiteri G, Kulishev C, Sajedi N, Woodford N, Blumel B, van der Werf MJ, Amato-Gauci AJ, Unemo M, and Cole MJ
- Subjects
- Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Azithromycin pharmacology, Azithromycin therapeutic use, Cefixime pharmacology, Cefixime therapeutic use, Ceftriaxone pharmacology, Ceftriaxone therapeutic use, Ciprofloxacin pharmacology, Ciprofloxacin therapeutic use, Drug Resistance, Bacterial, Female, Homosexuality, Male, Humans, Male, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Anti-Infective Agents therapeutic use, Gonorrhea drug therapy, Gonorrhea epidemiology, Pharyngitis drug therapy, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Background: The European Gonococcal Antimicrobial Surveillance Programme (Euro-GASP) performs annual sentinel surveillance of Neisseria gonorrhoeae susceptibility to therapeutically relevant antimicrobials across the European Union/European Economic Area (EU/EEA). We present the Euro-GASP results from 2019 (26 countries), linked to patient epidemiological data, and compared with data from previous years., Methods: Agar dilution and minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) gradient strip methodologies were used to determine the antimicrobial susceptibility (using EUCAST clinical breakpoints, where available) of 3239 N. gonorrhoeae isolates from 26 countries across the EU/EEA. Significance of differences compared with Euro-GASP results in previous years was analysed using Z-test and the Pearson's χ2 test was used to assess significance of odds ratios for associations between patient epidemiological data and antimicrobial resistance., Results: European N. gonorrhoeae isolates collected between 2016 and 2019 displayed shifting MIC distributions for; ceftriaxone, with highly susceptible isolates increasing over time and occasional resistant isolates each year; cefixime, with highly-susceptible isolates becoming increasingly common; azithromycin, with a shift away from lower MICs towards higher MICs above the EUCAST epidemiological cut-off (ECOFF); and ciprofloxacin which is displaying a similar shift in MICs as observed for azithromycin. In 2019, two isolates displayed ceftriaxone resistance, but both isolates had MICs below the azithromycin ECOFF. Cefixime resistance (0.8%) was associated with patient sex, with resistance higher in females compared with male heterosexuals and men-who-have-sex-with-men (MSM). The number of countries reporting isolates with azithromycin MICs above the ECOFF increased from 76.9% (20/26) in 2016 to 92.3% (24/26) in 2019. Isolates with azithromycin MICs above the ECOFF (9.0%) were associated with pharyngeal infection sites. Following multivariable analysis, ciprofloxacin resistance remained associated with isolates from MSM and heterosexual males compared with females, the absence of a concurrent chlamydial infection, pharyngeal infection sites and patients ≥ 25 years of age., Conclusions: Resistance to ceftriaxone and cefixime remained uncommon in EU/EEA countries in 2019 with a significant decrease in cefixime resistance observed between 2016 and 2019. The significant increase in azithromycin "resistance" (azithromycin MICs above the ECOFF) threatens the effectiveness of the dual therapy (ceftriaxone + azithromycin), i.e., for ceftriaxone-resistant cases, currently recommended in many countries internationally and requires close monitoring., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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46. Europe-wide expansion and eradication of multidrug-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae lineages: a genomic surveillance study.
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Sánchez-Busó L, Cole MJ, Spiteri G, Day M, Jacobsson S, Golparian D, Sajedi N, Yeats CA, Abudahab K, Underwood A, Bluemel B, Aanensen DM, and Unemo M
- Subjects
- Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Azithromycin pharmacology, Cefixime therapeutic use, Ceftriaxone pharmacology, Drug Resistance, Bacterial genetics, Europe epidemiology, Genomics, Homosexuality, Male, Humans, Male, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Neisseria gonorrhoeae genetics, Gonorrhea drug therapy, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Background: Genomic surveillance using quality-assured whole-genome sequencing (WGS) together with epidemiological and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) data is essential to characterise the circulating Neisseria gonorrhoeae lineages and their association to patient groups (defined by demographic and epidemiological factors). In 2013, the European gonococcal population was characterised genomically for the first time. We describe the European gonococcal population in 2018 and identify emerging or vanishing lineages associated with AMR and epidemiological characteristics of patients, to elucidate recent changes in AMR and gonorrhoea epidemiology in Europe., Methods: We did WGS on 2375 gonococcal isolates from 2018 (mainly Sept 1-Nov 30) in 26 EU and EEA countries. Molecular typing and AMR determinants were extracted from quality-checked genomic data. Association analyses identified links between genomic lineages, AMR, and epidemiological data., Findings: Azithromycin-resistant N gonorrhoeae (8·0% [191/2375] in 2018) is rising in Europe due to the introduction or emergence and subsequent expansion of a novel N gonorrhoeae multi-antigen sequence typing (NG-MAST) genogroup, G12302 (132 [5·6%] of 2375; N gonorrhoeae sequence typing for antimicrobial resistance [NG-STAR] clonal complex [CC]168/63), carrying a mosaic mtrR promoter and mtrD sequence and found in 24 countries in 2018. CC63 was associated with pharyngeal infections in men who have sex with men. Susceptibility to ceftriaxone and cefixime is increasing, as the resistance-associated lineage, NG-MAST G1407 (51 [2·1%] of 2375), is progressively vanishing since 2009-10., Interpretation: Enhanced gonococcal AMR surveillance is imperative worldwide. WGS, linked to epidemiological and AMR data, is essential to elucidate the dynamics in gonorrhoea epidemiology and gonococcal populations as well as to predict AMR. When feasible, WGS should supplement the national and international AMR surveillance programmes to elucidate AMR changes over time. In the EU and EEA, increasing low-level azithromycin resistance could threaten the recommended ceftriaxone-azithromycin dual therapy, and an evidence-based clinical azithromycin resistance breakpoint is needed. Nevertheless, increasing ceftriaxone susceptibility, declining cefixime resistance, and absence of known resistance mutations for new treatments (zoliflodacin, gepotidacin) are promising., Funding: European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, Centre for Genomic Pathogen Surveillance, Örebro University Hospital, Wellcome., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests We declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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47. Ongoing monkeypox virus outbreak, Portugal, 29 April to 23 May 2022.
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Perez Duque M, Ribeiro S, Martins JV, Casaca P, Leite PP, Tavares M, Mansinho K, Duque LM, Fernandes C, Cordeiro R, Borrego MJ, Pelerito A, de Carvalho IL, Núncio S, Manageiro V, Minetti C, Machado J, Haussig JM, Croci R, Spiteri G, Casal AS, Mendes D, Souto T, Pocinho S, Fernandes T, Firme A, Vasconcelos P, and Freitas G
- Subjects
- Disease Outbreaks, Humans, Male, Portugal epidemiology, Travel, Mpox, Monkeypox diagnosis, Mpox, Monkeypox epidemiology, Monkeypox virus genetics
- Abstract
Up to 27 May 2022, Portugal has detected 96 confirmed cases of monkeypox. We describe 27 confirmed cases (median age: 33 years (range: 22-51); all males), with an earliest symptom onset date of 29 April. Almost all cases (n = 25) live in the Lisbon and Tagus Valley health region. Most cases were neither part of identified transmission chains, nor linked to travel or had contact with symptomatic persons or with animals, suggesting the possible previously undetected spread of monkeypox.
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- 2022
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48. The European response to control and manage multi- and extensively drug-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae .
- Author
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Cole MJ, Day M, Jacobsson S, Amato-Gauci AJ, Spiteri G, and Unemo M
- Subjects
- Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Ceftriaxone pharmacology, Ceftriaxone therapeutic use, Drug Resistance, Bacterial, Humans, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Gonorrhea diagnosis, Gonorrhea drug therapy, Gonorrhea epidemiology, Neisseria gonorrhoeae
- Abstract
Because cefixime and ceftriaxone resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae and gonorrhoea treatment failures were increasing, a response plan to control and manage multidrug-resistant N. gonorrhoeae (MDR-NG) in Europe was published in 2012. The three main areas of the plan were to: (i) strengthen surveillance of antimicrobial resistance (AMR), (ii) implement monitoring of treatment failures and (iii) establish a communication strategy to increase awareness and disseminate AMR results. Since 2012, several additional extensively drug-resistant N. gonorrhoeae (XDR-NG) strains have emerged, and strains with high-level ceftriaxone resistance spread internationally. This prompted an evaluation and review of the 2012 European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) response plan, revealing an overall improvement in many aspects of monitoring AMR in N. gonorrhoeae ; however, treatment failure monitoring was a weakness. Accordingly, the plan was updated in 2019 to further support European Union/European Economic Area (EU/EEA) countries in controlling and managing the threat of MDR/XDR-NG in Europe through further strengthening of AMR surveillance and clinical management including treatment failure monitoring. The plan will be assessed biennially to ensure its effectiveness and its value. Along with prevention, diagnostic, treatment and epidemiological surveillance strategies, AMR surveillance is essential for effective control of gonorrhoea.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Glucose/Ribitol Dehydrogenase and 16.9 kDa Class I Heat Shock Protein 1 as Novel Wheat Allergens in Baker's Respiratory Allergy.
- Author
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Olivieri M, Spiteri G, Brandi J, Cecconi D, Fusi M, Zanoni G, and Rizzi C
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Female, Humans, Immunoglobulin E blood, Immunoglobulin E immunology, Male, Middle Aged, Protein Binding, Respiratory Function Tests, Skin Tests, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Wheat Hypersensitivity diagnosis, Allergens immunology, Glucose 1-Dehydrogenase immunology, Heat-Shock Proteins, Small immunology, Plant Proteins immunology, Sugar Alcohol Dehydrogenases immunology, Wheat Hypersensitivity immunology
- Abstract
Wheat allergens are responsible for symptoms in 60-70% of bakers with work-related allergy, and knowledge, at the molecular level, of this disorder is progressively accumulating. The aim of the present study is to investigate the panel of wheat IgE positivity in allergic Italian bakers, evaluating a possible contribution of novel wheat allergens included in the water/salt soluble fraction. The water/salt-soluble wheat flour proteins from the Italian wheat cultivar Bolero were separated by using 1-DE and 2-DE gel electrophoresis. IgE-binding proteins were detected using the pooled sera of 26 wheat allergic bakers by immunoblotting and directly recognized in Coomassie stained gel. After a preparative electrophoretic step, two enriched fractions were furtherly separated in 2-DE allowing for detection, by Coomassie, of three different proteins in the range of 21-27 kDa that were recognized by the pooled baker's IgE. Recovered spots were analyzed by nanoHPLC Chip tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). The immunodetected spots in 2D were subjected to mass spectrometry (MS) analysis identifying two new allergenic proteins: a glucose/ribitol dehydrogenase and a 16.9 kDa class I heat shock protein 1. Mass spectrometer testing of flour proteins of the wheat cultivars utilized by allergic bakers improves the identification of until now unknown occupational wheat allergens.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Post-Vaccination SARS-CoV-2 Infections among Health Workers at the University Hospital of Verona, Italy: A Retrospective Cohort Survey.
- Author
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Porru S, Spiteri G, Monaco MGL, Valotti A, Carta A, Lotti V, Diani E, Lippi G, Gibellini D, and Verlato G
- Abstract
Background: The SARS-CoV-2 vaccination campaign began on 27 December 2020 in Europe, primarily involving health workers. This study aimed to assess the SARS-CoV-2 vaccination effectiveness, as assessed by reductions in incidence, symptom severity, and further infection spreading., Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted on 9811 health workers operating at the Verona University Hospital, Italy, from 27 December 2020 to 3 May 2021. All health workers were offered vaccination with Comirnaty (BNT162b2, BioNTech/Pfizer, Mainz, Germany/New York, United States), and a health surveillance program was implemented with periodical swab testing. Vaccination status and clinical data were collected using an ad hoc semi-structured questionnaire and health surveillance charts., Results: As of 3rd of May, 82.5% of health workers had been vaccinated against SAR-CoV-2, and 177 (1.8%) had tested positive for SARS-CoV-2. Vaccination more than halved the cumulative incidence of SARS-CoV-2 infection and reduced by two-thirds the cumulative incidence of symptomatic subjects. In detail, most unvaccinated HWs were symptomatic; 50% reported fever, 45% reported ageusia/anosmia, and nearly 20% reported dyspnea. These percentages were much lower in HWs who had been vaccinated for at least 14 days (18% for fever and anosmia, 6% for dyspnea and ageusia). Moreover, cases of vaccine breakthrough were sixfold less likely to further spread the infection than unvaccinated HWs., Conclusions: SARS-CoV-2 vaccination reduced the infection frequency among HWs, further spreading of the infection, and the presence, severity, and duration of COVID-19-related symptoms.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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