Norovirus outbreaks: A systematic review of commonly implicated transmission routes and vehicles

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Abstract

Causal mechanisms of norovirus outbreaks are often not revealed. Understanding the transmission route (e.g. foodborne, waterborne, or environmental) and vehicle (e.g. shellfish or recreational water) of a norovirus outbreak, however, is of great public health importance; this information can facilitate interventions for an ongoing outbreak and regulatory action to limit future outbreaks. Towards this goal, we conducted a systematic review to examine whether published outbreak information was associated with the implicated transmission route or vehicle. Genogroup distribution was associated with transmission route and food vehicle, but attack rate and the presence of GII.4 strain were not associated with transmission route, food vehicle, or water vehicle. Attack rate, genogroup distribution, and GII.4 strain distribution also varied by other outbreak characteristics (e.g. setting, season, hemisphere). These relationships suggest that different genogroups exploit different environmental conditions and thereby can be used to predict the likelihood of various transmission routes or vehicles. © Cambridge University Press 2013.

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APA

Bitler, E. J., Matthews, J. E., Dickey, B. W., Eisenberg, J. N. S., & Leon, J. S. (2013, August). Norovirus outbreaks: A systematic review of commonly implicated transmission routes and vehicles. Epidemiology and Infection. https://doi.org/10.1017/S095026881300006X

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