Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics, Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Colorado School of Public Health, Aurora, CO, USA.
Environ Res. 2024 Jul 1;252(Pt 1):118796. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2024.118796. Epub 2024 Apr 4.
Previous work has found climate change-induced weather variability is suspected to increase the transmission of enteric pathogens, including Campylobacter, a leading cause of bacterial gastroenteritis. While the relationship between extreme weather events and diarrheal diseases has been documented, the specific impact on Campylobacter infections remains underexplored.
To synthesize the peer-reviewed literature exploring the effect of weather variability on Campylobacter infections in humans.
The review included English language, peer-reviewed articles, published up to September 1, 2022 in PubMed, Embase, GEOBASE, Agriculture and Environmental Science Database, and CABI Global Health exploring the effect of an antecedent weather event on human enteric illness caused by Campylobacter (PROSPERO Protocol # 351884). We extracted study information including data sources, methods, summary measures, and effect sizes. Quality and weight of evidence reported was summarized and bias assessed for each article.
After screening 278 articles, 47 articles (34 studies, 13 outbreak reports) were included in the evidence synthesis. Antecedent weather events included precipitation (n = 35), temperature (n = 30), relative humidity (n = 7), sunshine (n = 6), and El Niño and La Niña (n = 3). Reviewed studies demonstrated that increases in precipitation and temperature were correlated with Campylobacter infections under specific conditions, whereas low relative humidity and sunshine were negatively correlated. Articles estimating the effect of animal operations (n = 15) found presence and density of animal operations were significantly associated with infections. However, most of the included articles did not assess confounding by seasonality, presence of animal operations, or describe estimates of risk.
This review explores what is known about the influence of weather events on Campylobacter and identifies previously underreported negative associations between low relative humidity and sunshine on Campylobacter infections. Future research should explore pathogen-specific estimates of risk, which can be used to influence public health strategies, improve source attribution and causal pathways, and project disease burden due to climate change.
先前的研究发现,气候变化引起的天气变化可能会增加肠道病原体(包括导致细菌性肠胃炎的主要病原体空肠弯曲菌)的传播。虽然极端天气事件与腹泻病之间的关系已有记载,但对空肠弯曲菌感染的具体影响仍未得到充分探索。
综合已发表的同行评议文献,探索天气变化对人类空肠弯曲菌感染的影响。
本综述纳入了截至 2022 年 9 月 1 日在 PubMed、Embase、GEOBASE、农业与环境科学数据库和 CABI 全球健康数据库发表的探讨天气事件对人类由空肠弯曲菌引起的肠道疾病影响的英文同行评议文章。我们提取了研究信息,包括数据来源、方法、汇总指标和效应量。对每篇文章的质量和证据权重进行了总结,并评估了偏倚。
在筛选了 278 篇文章后,有 47 篇文章(34 项研究,13 项暴发报告)被纳入证据综合分析。先前的天气事件包括降水(n=35)、温度(n=30)、相对湿度(n=7)、日照(n=6)和厄尔尼诺和拉尼娜现象(n=3)。综述研究表明,在特定条件下,降水和温度的增加与空肠弯曲菌感染有关,而相对湿度和日照的降低与感染呈负相关。估计动物操作影响的文章(n=15)发现动物操作的存在和密度与感染显著相关。然而,大多数纳入的文章没有评估季节性、动物操作存在的混杂因素,也没有描述风险的估计。
本综述探讨了天气事件对空肠弯曲菌的影响,并发现了相对湿度和日照与空肠弯曲菌感染之间以前未报道的负相关关系。未来的研究应探索病原体特异性风险估计,这可以用于影响公共卫生策略,改进病因归因和因果途径,并预测气候变化引起的疾病负担。