4.5 Article

A waterborne Campylobacter jejuni outbreak on a Greek island

Journal

EPIDEMIOLOGY AND INFECTION
Volume 138, Issue 12, Pages 1726-1734

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0950268810002116

Keywords

Campylobacter; case-control study; case-crossover study; outbreak investigation; waterborne

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A case-control and a case-crossover study were performed to investigate a Campylobacter jejuni outbreak in Crete in 2009. Most cases originated from rural areas, served by a different water-supply system from that of the adjacent town. Thirty-seven cases and 79 controls were interviewed; cases were interviewed for two different time periods for the case-crossover study. Stool cultures, PFGE and MLST subtyping were run in human samples. Univariately, consumption of tap water was associated with C. jejuni infection. Stratified analysis revealed that water-supply system was an effect modifier of this association. In the multivariable analysis, the rural areas' water supplier and drinking tap water were risk factors. No risk factors were revealed in the case-crossover study. No Campylobacter were isolated in the tested water samples. There is strong epidemiological evidence that tap water was the vehicle of the outbreak.

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