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Immune response-eliciting exposure to Campylobacter vastly exceeds the incidence of clinically overt campylobacteriosis but is associated with similar risk factors: A nationwide serosurvey in the Netherlands.

Authors :
Monge S
Teunis P
Friesema I
Franz E
Ang W
van Pelt W
Mughini-Gras L
Source :
The Journal of infection [J Infect] 2018 Sep; Vol. 77 (3), pp. 171-177. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 May 07.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background: We aimed to estimate population-level exposure to Campylobacter and associated risk factors, using three approaches for serological data analysis.<br />Methods: Nationwide, population-based serosurvey in the Netherlands (Feb 2006-Jun 2007). Anti-Campylobacter IgG, IgM and IgA were measured using ELISA, and analysed via: a) seroincidence estimation, using reference values of antibody peak levels and decay rates over-time after Campylobacter exposure; b) two normal distributions of true positives/negatives fitted to the IgG distribution to derive seroprevalence and individual probability of being positive/negative; and c) IgG levels. Risk factors were analysed using multiple linear regressions.<br />Results: From 1559 respondents, seroincidence was estimated at 1.61 infections/person-year (95%CI:1.58-1.64) and seroprevalence at 68.1% (65.4-70.9). The three approaches identified similar risk factors, although seroincidence had higher power and results were interpretable as risk: seroincidence was higher in females [exp(b) = 1.07(1.04-1.11)], older ages [vs. 15-34 years; for < 5, 5-14, 35-54 and 55-70 years: 0.60(0.58-0.63), 0.74(0.71-0.78), 1.08(1.03-1.13) and 1.08(1.01-1.16), respectively], non-Dutch background [Moroccan/Turkish: 1.25(1.14-1.37); Caribbean: 1.14(1.03-1.25)], low socioeconomic status [1.05(1.01-1.10)], traveling outside Europe [1.05(1.01-1.09)], and eating undercooked meat [1.04(1.01-1.08)].<br />Conclusion: Campylobacter exposure is much higher than clinical infection rates, but risk factors are similar to those previously described.Seroincidence is a powerful measure to study Campylobacter epidemiology, and is preferred over other methods.<br /> (Copyright © 2018 The British Infection Association. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1532-2742
Volume :
77
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of infection
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29746943
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinf.2018.04.016