Ten-year trends and risk factors for non-o157 shiga toxin-producing escherichia coli found through shiga toxin testing, connecticut, 2000-2009

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Abstract

Background. The epidemiology over time of non-O157 Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) is unknown. Since 1999, increasing numbers of laboratories in Connecticut have been testing for ST rather than culturing for O157, enabling identification of non-O157 STEC. Methods. Beginning in 2000, Connecticut laboratories were required to submit ST-positive broths to the State Laboratory for isolation and typing of STEC. The ratio of non-O157:O157 from laboratories conducting ST testing was used to determine state-level estimates for non-O157 STEC. Patients with STEC were interviewed for exposure factors in the 7 days preceding illness. Incidence trends, clinical features, and epidemiology of non-O157 and O157 STEC infections were compared. Results. From 1 January 2000 through 31 December 2009, ST testing detected 392 (59%) of 663 reported STEC infections; 229 (58%) of the isolates were non-O157. The estimated incidence of STEC infection decreased by 34%. O157 and the top 4 non-O157 serogroups, O111, O103, O26, and O45, were a stable percentage of all STEC isolates over the 10-year period. Bloody diarrhea, hospitalization, and hemolytic uremic syndrome were more common in patients with O157 STEC than in patients with non-O157 STEC infection. Exposure risks of patients with non-O157 STEC infection differed from those of patients with O157 STEC infection primarily in international travel (15.3% vs 2.5%; P

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Hadler, J. L., Clogher, P., Hurd, S., Phan, Q., Mandour, M., Bemis, K., & Marcus, R. (2011). Ten-year trends and risk factors for non-o157 shiga toxin-producing escherichia coli found through shiga toxin testing, connecticut, 2000-2009. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 53(3), 269–276. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/cir377

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