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Investigation of US Cyclospora cayetanensis outbreaks in 2019 and evaluation of an improved Cyclospora genotyping system against 2019 cyclosporiasis outbreak clusters

Authors :
Brooke Clemons
Ryan Threlkel
Vitaliano Cama
Anne Straily
Susan Madison-Antenucci
Michael J. Arrowood
Jayne Kenneally
Katherine R Kreil
Brooke M. Whitney
Betelehem Bera
Elizabeth Cebelinski
Katelyn Houghton
Travis Richins
Yvonne Qvarnstrom
Joel Barratt
Source :
Epidemiology and Infection. 149
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2021.

Abstract

Cyclosporiasis is an illness characterised by watery diarrhoea caused by the food-borne parasite Cyclospora cayetanensis. The increase in annual US cyclosporiasis cases led public health agencies to develop genotyping tools that aid outbreak investigations. A team at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) developed a system based on deep amplicon sequencing and machine learning, for detecting genetically-related clusters of cyclosporiasis to aid epidemiologic investigations. An evaluation of this system during 2018 supported its robustness, indicating that it possessed sufficient utility to warrant further evaluation. However, the earliest version of CDC's system had some limitations from a bioinformatics standpoint. Namely, reliance on proprietary software, the inability to detect novel haplotypes and absence of a strategy to select an appropriate number of discrete genetic clusters would limit the system's future deployment potential. We recently introduced several improvements that address these limitations and the aim of this study was to reassess the system's performance to ensure that the changes introduced had no observable negative impacts. Comparison of epidemiologically-defined cyclosporiasis clusters from 2019 to analogous genetic clusters detected using CDC's improved system reaffirmed its excellent sensitivity (90%) and specificity (99%), and confirmed its high discriminatory power. This C. cayetanensis genotyping system is robust and with ongoing improvement will form the basis of a US-wide C. cayetanensis genotyping network for clinical specimens.

Details

ISSN :
14694409 and 09502688
Volume :
149
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Epidemiology and Infection
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ff2763996bc93a8c949c3027e587ab53
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/s0950268821002090