2015-2021年COVID-19限制对英格兰和威尔士隐孢子虫流行病学的影响:时间序列分析

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q3 MICROBIOLOGY Journal of medical microbiology Pub Date : 2023-06-01 DOI:10.1099/jmm.0.001693
James P Adamson, Rachel M Chalmers, Daniel Rh Thomas, Kristin Elwin, Guy Robinson, Alicia Barrasa
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引用次数: 1

摘要

介绍。在英格兰和威尔士,隐孢子虫病病例在春季和秋季达到高峰,这与人畜共患/环境暴露(小隐孢子虫,春季/秋季)和海外旅行/水基活动(人隐孢子虫,秋季)有关。2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的限制措施阻止了社交、海外旅行和进入场馆(游泳池/餐馆)长达数月,随着人们寻求其他乡村活动,这可能会增加环境暴露。对COVID-19的限制降低了人弓形虫病例的发病率,并可能增加了小弓形虫病例的发病率。为了为监测规划提供信息/加强监测规划,我们调查了COVID-19限制对人原体和细小原体病例流行病学的影响。病例从隐孢子虫参考单位(CRU)数据库中提取(2015年1月1日至2021年12月31日)。我们确定了在2019冠状病毒病之前和之后实施限制的两个时期,对应于2020年3月23日第一次全英封锁之前和之后。我们进行了时间序列分析,评估了这些时期之间小弧菌和人源弧菌发病率的差异、趋势和周期性。21例 304例(小恙螨12例 246例;c . hominis = 9058)。限制措施实施后,人原锥虫的发病率下降了97.5% (95% CI: 95.4- 98.6%;电脑。限制措施实施后的发病率下降了49.0% (95% CI: 38.4- 58.3%;电脑。。在记录的病例中,22%的人原疟病例和8%的小原疟病例曾出国旅行。在限制措施实施后,人原锥虫病例几乎完全停止,这进一步表明,出国旅行会导致感染。小弧菌的发病率急剧下降,但在限制措施实施后恢复,与限制措施的放松一致。今后的人原疟超标报告应排除限制措施实施后的时间段,但保留小原疟超标报告(限制措施实施后的前6周除外)。应改进对有胃肠道疾病症状的人的感染预防和控制建议,以确保手卫生和避免去游泳池。
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Impact of the COVID-19 restrictions on the epidemiology of Cryptosporidium spp. in England and Wales, 2015-2021: a time series analysis.

Introduction. In England and Wales, cryptosporidiosis cases peak in spring and autumn, associated with zoonotic/environmental exposures (Cryptosporidium parvum, spring/autumn) and overseas travel/water-based activities (Cryptosporidium hominis, autumn). Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) restrictions prevented social mixing, overseas travel and access to venues (swimming pools/restaurants) for many months, potentially increasing environmental exposures as people sought alternative countryside activities.Hypothesis. COVID-19 restrictions reduced incidence of C. hominis cases and potentially increased incidence of C. parvum cases.Aim. To inform/strengthen surveillance programmes, we investigated the impact of COVID-19 restrictions on the epidemiology of C. hominis and C. parvum cases.Methodology. Cases were extracted from the Cryptosporidium Reference Unit (CRU) database (1 January 2015 to 31 December 2021). We defined two periods for pre- and post-COVID-19 restrictions implementation, corresponding to before and after the first UK-wide lockdown on 23 March 2020. We conducted a time series analysis, assessing differences in C. parvum and C. hominis incidence, trends and periodicity between these periods.Results. There were 21 304 cases (C. parvum=12 246; C. hominis=9058). Post-restrictions implementation incidence of C. hominis dropped by 97.5 % (95 % CI: 95.4-98.6 %; P<0.001). The decreasing incidence trend pre-restrictions was not observed post-restrictions implementation due to lack of cases. No periodicity change was observed post-restrictions implementation. There was a strong social gradient; there was a higher proportion of cases in deprived areas. For C. parvum, post-restrictions implementation incidence fell by 49.0 % (95 % CI: 38.4-58.3 %; P<0.001). There was no pre-restrictions incidence trend but an increasing incidence trend post-restrictions implementation. A periodicity change was observed post-restriction implementation, peaking 1 week earlier in spring and 2 weeks later in autumn. The social gradient was the inverse of that for C. hominis. Where recorded, 22 % of C. hominis and 8 % of C. parvum cases had travelled abroad.Conclusion. C. hominis cases almost entirely ceased post-restrictions implementation, reinforcing that foreign travel seeds infections. C. parvum incidence fell sharply but recovered post-restrictions implementation, consistent with relaxation of restrictions. Future exceedance reporting for C. hominis should exclude the post-restriction implementation period but retain it for C. parvum (except the first 6 weeks post-restrictions implementation). Infection prevention and control advice should be improved for people with gastrointestinal illness (GI) symptoms to ensure hand hygiene and swimming pool avoidance.

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来源期刊
Journal of medical microbiology
Journal of medical microbiology 医学-微生物学
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
3.30%
发文量
143
审稿时长
4.5 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Medical Microbiology provides comprehensive coverage of medical, dental and veterinary microbiology, and infectious diseases. We welcome everything from laboratory research to clinical trials, including bacteriology, virology, mycology and parasitology. We publish articles under the following subject categories: Antimicrobial resistance; Clinical microbiology; Disease, diagnosis and diagnostics; Medical mycology; Molecular and microbial epidemiology; Microbiome and microbial ecology in health; One Health; Pathogenesis, virulence and host response; Prevention, therapy and therapeutics
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