Mughini-Gras Lapo, Enserink Remko, Friesema Ingrid, Heck Max, van Duynhoven Yvonne, van Pelt Wilfrid
National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Centre for Infectious Disease Control (CIb), Bilthoven, the Netherlands.
PLoS One. 2014 Feb 4;9(2):e87933. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0087933. eCollection 2014.
Several case-control studies have investigated risk factors for human salmonellosis while others have used Salmonella subtyping to attribute human infections to different food and animal reservoirs. This study combined case-control and source attribution data into a single analysis to explore risk factors at the point of exposure for human salmonellosis originating from four putative food-producing animal reservoirs (pigs, cattle, broilers and layers/eggs) in the Netherlands. We confirmed that most human cases (∼ 90%) were attributable to layers/eggs and pigs. Layers/eggs and broilers were the most likely reservoirs of salmonellosis in adults, in urban areas, and in spring/summer, whereas pigs and cattle were the most likely reservoirs of salmonellosis in children, in rural areas, and in autumn/winter. Several reservoir-specific risk factors were identified. Not using a chopping board for raw meat only and consuming raw/undercooked meat were risk factors for infection with salmonellas originating from pigs, cattle and broilers. Consuming raw/undercooked eggs and by-products were risk factors for layer/egg-associated salmonellosis. Using antibiotics was a risk factor for pig- and cattle-associated salmonellosis and using proton-pump inhibitors for salmonellosis attributable to any reservoir. Pig- and cattle-associated infections were also linked to direct contact with animals and environmental exposure (e.g. playing in sandboxes). Eating fish, meat in pastry, and several non-meat foods (fruit, vegetables and pasteurized dairy products) were protective factors. Consuming pork and occupational exposure to animals and/or raw meats were protective against layer/egg-associated salmonellosis. We concluded that individuals acquiring salmonellosis from different reservoirs have different associated risk factors, suggesting that salmonellas may infect humans through various transmission pathways depending on their original reservoirs. The outcome of classical case-control studies can be enhanced by incorporating source attribution data and vice versa.
多项病例对照研究调查了人类沙门氏菌病的危险因素,而其他研究则利用沙门氏菌分型将人类感染归因于不同的食物和动物宿主。本研究将病例对照和来源归因数据合并到单一分析中,以探讨荷兰四种假定的产食用动物宿主(猪、牛、肉鸡和蛋鸡/鸡蛋)引发人类沙门氏菌病的暴露点危险因素。我们证实,大多数人类病例(约90%)可归因于蛋鸡/鸡蛋和猪。蛋鸡/鸡蛋和肉鸡是城市地区以及春夏季成年人沙门氏菌病最可能的宿主,而猪和牛是农村地区以及秋冬季儿童沙门氏菌病最可能的宿主。确定了几个特定宿主的危险因素。仅为生肉不使用案板以及食用生肉/未煮熟的肉是感染源自猪、牛和肉鸡的沙门氏菌的危险因素。食用生鸡蛋/未煮熟的鸡蛋及其副产品是与蛋鸡/鸡蛋相关的沙门氏菌病的危险因素。使用抗生素是与猪和牛相关的沙门氏菌病的危险因素,而使用质子泵抑制剂是任何宿主所致沙门氏菌病的危险因素。与猪和牛相关的感染还与直接接触动物和环境暴露(如在沙箱中玩耍)有关。食用鱼类、肉馅中的肉以及几种非肉类食物(水果、蔬菜和巴氏杀菌乳制品)是保护因素。食用猪肉以及职业性接触动物和/或生肉可预防与蛋鸡/鸡蛋相关的沙门氏菌病。我们得出结论,从不同宿主感染沙门氏菌的个体有不同的相关危险因素,这表明沙门氏菌可能根据其原始宿主通过各种传播途径感染人类。纳入来源归因数据可增强经典病例对照研究的结果,反之亦然。