Abstract

BackgroundIn developed countries, giardiasis is considered a travel related disease. However, routine surveillance data from Germany indicate that >50% of infections were acquired indigenously. We studied the epidemiological characteristics of symptomatic Giardia infections acquired in Germany and abroad, and verified the proportion of cases acquired in Germany in order to investigate risk factors for sporadic autochthonous Giardia infections.MethodsWe identified Giardia cases notified by 41 local health authorities between February 2007 and January 2008 and interviewed them on their clinical symptoms, underlying morbidities, travel abroad and potential risk factors for the disease. We conducted a case-control-study including laboratory-confirmed (microscopy or antigen-test) autochthonous Giardia cases with clinical manifestations (diarrhoea, cramps, bloating) and randomly selected controls from the local population registry matched by county of residence and age-group (0-5, 6-19, ≥20 years). Secondary cases, controls with diarrhoea and persons who had travelled outside Germany in the three weeks prior to disease onset (exposure period) were excluded. We calculated adjusted odds ratios (aOR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) using conditional logistic regression.ResultsOf 273 interviewed cases, 131 (48%) had not travelled abroad during the defined exposure period. Of these 131, 85 (65%) were male, 68 (54%) were living in communities with >100,000 inhabitants and 107 (83%) were aged 20 years or older. We included 120 cases and 240 controls in the case-control study. Cases were more likely to be male (aOR 2.5 CI 1.4-4.4), immunocompromised (aOR 15.3 CI 1.8-127) and daily consumers of green salad (aOR 2.9 CI 1.2-7.2). Contact with animals (pets/farm animals) and exposure to surface water (swimming/water sports) were not associated with symptomatic disease.ConclusionsA substantial proportion of Giardia lamblia cases in Germany are indigenously acquired. Symptomatic cases are significantly more likely to be immunocompromised than control persons from the general population. Physicians should consider Giardia infections among patients with no recent history of travel abroad, particularly if they have immune deficiencies. Green salads may be an important vehicle of infection. Information campaigns highlighting this food-borne risk should emphasise the risk to persons with immune deficiencies.

Highlights

  • In developed countries, giardiasis is considered a travel related disease

  • We aimed to describe the epidemiological characteristics of symptomatic Giardia infections in Germany, to verify the proportion of cases acquired in Germany and to identify possible risk factors for sporadic symptomatic infections in order to target intervention measures

  • As we have no information on asymptomatic carriage of Giardia trophozoites in cases before our defined exposure period, it is possible that in some cases we looked for risk factors for the expression of symptoms following asymptomatic carriage rather than for risk factors related to the transmission of the pathogen

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Summary

Introduction

Giardiasis is considered a travel related disease. routine surveillance data from Germany indicate that >50% of infections were acquired indigenously. Giardia lamblia is an enteric protozoan pathogen found in a variety of mammalian hosts, including humans. Giardia lamblia isolates exhibit wide genetic diversity. In Germany, acute Giardia lamblia infections were made notifiable in 2001. Laboratories notify the diagnosis to the local health authorities, who obtain additional information from the cases on age, sex, symptoms, occupation as a food handler and probable place of infection (based on travel abroad during the exposure period). Most cases (62%) were reported to have acquired their infection in Germany [8]. Among these cases, the source of infection and possible risk factors were unknown

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