Imrey P B, Jackson L A, Ludwinski P H, England A C, Fella G A, Fox B C, Isdale L B, Reeves M W, Wenger J D
Department of Medical Information Science, Community Health, and Statistics, University of Illinois, Urbana, USA.
J Clin Microbiol. 1995 Dec;33(12):3133-7. doi: 10.1128/jcm.33.12.3133-3137.1995.
Community outbreaks of serogroup C invasive meningococcal disease are increasing in North America (L. H. Harrison, JAMA 273:419-421, 1995; L. A. Jackson, A. Schuchat, M. W. Reeves, and J. D. Wenger, JAMA 273:382-389, 1995; C. M. Whalen, J. C. Hockin, A. Ryan, and F. Ashton, JAMA 273:390-394). In a recent 15-month university outbreak, disease was linked to patronage of a specific campus-area bar, suggesting that aspects of a campus bar environment might promote meningococcal transmission (P. B. Imrey, L. A. Jackson, P. H. Ludwinski, et al., Am. J. Epidemiol., in press). To investigate this hypothesis, oropharyngeal carriage results from samples taken from 867 university health service clients and 85 campus-area bar employees during the last 3 months of the outbreak were analyzed to determine factors correlated with carriage of any strain of Neisseria meningitidis. Results were validated with data from samples from 344 health center clients and 211 campus bar employees taken 8 months after the last outbreak case. Recent alcohol consumption (adjusted prevalence odds ratio = 3.8 for > 15 versus 0 drinks in last week [P = 0.0012]) and campus bar patronage (adjusted odds ratio = 1.9 for any versus no patronage in last 2 weeks [P = 0.0122]) showed separate effects in both univariate and multiple logistic regression analyses of data from the 1992 health center clients. Prevalence of meningococcal carriage among 1992 campus bar workers was 3.8 times that among health center clients; this prevalence ratio was roughly 2.5 after adjustment for alcohol consumption and bar patronage. Recent antibiotic usage was protective (prevalence odds ratio = 0.3) among health center clients and bar workers. These findings were generally supported by the validation samples. If alcohol consumption and other aspects of the campus bar environment facilitate transmission of and/or colonization by N. meningitidis, then the introduction of a highly pathogenic substrain into the campus bar environment may provide an unusual opportunity for invasive meningococcal disease within a campus community.
北美C群侵袭性脑膜炎球菌病的社区疫情正在增加(L. H. 哈里森,《美国医学会杂志》273:419 - 421,1995;L. A. 杰克逊、A. 舒查特、M. W. 里夫斯和J. D. 温格,《美国医学会杂志》273:382 - 389,1995;C. M. 惠伦、J. C. 霍金、A. 瑞安和F. 阿什顿,《美国医学会杂志》273:390 - 394)。在最近一次持续15个月的大学疫情中,疾病与特定校园区域酒吧的光顾有关,这表明校园酒吧环境的某些方面可能促进脑膜炎球菌传播(P. B. 伊姆雷、L. A. 杰克逊、P. H. 卢德温斯基等人,《美国流行病学杂志》,即将发表)。为了研究这一假设,对疫情最后3个月从867名大学健康服务客户和85名校园区域酒吧员工采集的样本的口咽部携带结果进行了分析,以确定与任何脑膜炎奈瑟菌菌株携带相关的因素。结果用最后一例疫情病例8个月后从344名健康中心客户和211名校园酒吧员工采集的样本数据进行了验证。近期饮酒(上周饮酒>15杯与0杯相比,调整后的患病率比值比 = 3.8 [P = 0.0012])和光顾校园酒吧(过去两周有光顾与无光顾相比,调整后的比值比 = 1.9 [P = 0.0122])在对1992年健康中心客户数据的单变量和多变量逻辑回归分析中显示出独立的影响。1992年校园酒吧工作人员中脑膜炎球菌携带率是健康中心客户的3.8倍;在调整饮酒和光顾酒吧因素后,这一患病率比值约为2.5。近期使用抗生素在健康中心客户和酒吧工作人员中具有保护作用(患病率比值比 = 0.3)。这些发现总体上得到了验证样本的支持。如果饮酒和校园酒吧环境的其他方面促进脑膜炎奈瑟菌的传播和/或定植,那么将高致病性亚菌株引入校园酒吧环境可能会在校园社区内为侵袭性脑膜炎球菌病提供一个不同寻常的机会。