Risk factors for mortality in non-pregnancy-related listeriosis

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Abstract

We examined non-pregnancy-related listeriosis cases in England and Wales reported to the Health Protection Agency between 1990 and 2009 (n=1864) using unconditional multivariate logistic regression analysis to identify factors independently associated with mortality. A subset analysis of cases between 2005 and 2009 (n=694) investigated the additional effect of antibiotic therapy on survival. In these cases particular malignancies, alcoholism, cardiovascular disease, increasing age, and treatment to reduce gastric acid secretion were positively associated with mortality. The absence of a concurrent condition and presence of autoimmune disease had a protective effect. The subset analysis identified illness in winter or spring as a risk factor and antibiotic therapy as a protective factor for mortality. The impact of antibiotic therapy, seasonality and reduced gastric acid status on survival should be further investigated. Policy-makers and clinicians need to more broadly advise those at risk of contracting this disease and dying as a consequence. Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011.

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Mook, P., Patel, B., & Gillespie, I. A. (2012). Risk factors for mortality in non-pregnancy-related listeriosis. Epidemiology and Infection, 140(4), 706–715. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0950268811001051

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