Abstract

BackgroundOver the past 20 years, Hepatitis A notifications in Italy have been in decline. Since the beginning of 2013 however, Italy has been experiencing a foodborne hepatitis A outbreak caused by genotype IA, involving hundreds of cases. Consumption of frozen mixed berries was deemed the potential vehicle of infection.We aimed to investigate the spread of hepatitis A virus (HAV) in Italy through the monitoring of urban sewages collected at Wastewater Treatment Plants (WTPs) and a subsequent comparison of environmental surveillance data with data from the clinical surveillance performed during the epidemic.MethodsThe study covered 15 months, from July 2012 to September 2013, comprising the outbreak and the preceding six months. Environmental surveillance consisted of the analysis of urban sewage samples collected at 19 WTPs in seven of the Italian regions most affected by the epidemic. HAV isolates were detected and typed using a nested RT-PCR targeting the VP1/2A junction. Parallel clinical surveillance was performed by the sentinel surveillance system for acute viral hepatitis (SEIEVA) and by the ministerial Central Task Force on Hepatitis A, established with the purpose of determining the source of the outbreak and adopting appropriate outbreak control strategies.ResultsA total of 38/157 wastewater samples (24.2%) were positive for HAV, 16 collected in 2012 and 22 in 2013. Several HAV strains were detected, including the IA variant implicated in the outbreak and isolated from clinical cases over the same period. The vast majority of sequences belonged to genotype IB. Interestingly however, although these included variants related to strains that had been involved in past Italian epidemics, none were detected in recent clinical samples, probably due to underreporting or asymptomatic circulation. Conversely, a number of sequences were identified in clinical samples that were not found in wastewaters.ConclusionsThe percentage of sewage samples detected as HAV-positive in this study are consistent with the classification of Italy as a country with low/intermediate endemicity. A combined environmental/clinical surveillance is able to provide a more complete picture of the spread of HAV and of the genotypes circulating in the population, allowing a better understanding of changes in disease trends.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2334-14-419) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Over the past 20 years, Hepatitis A notifications in Italy have been in decline

  • We analyzed sewage samples collected in the framework of an existing Wastewater Treatment Plants (WTPs)-based environmental network comprising 40 WTPs and covering the entire country, previously established for the surveillance of other enteric viruses [7,8,9]

  • Environmental samples A total of 157 sewage samples were tested for hepatitis A virus (HAV) by the nested PCR assay described above, 76 collected in 2012 and 81 in 2013

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Summary

Introduction

Over the past 20 years, Hepatitis A notifications in Italy have been in decline. Since the beginning of 2013 Italy has been experiencing a foodborne hepatitis A outbreak caused by genotype IA, involving hundreds of cases. Hepatitis A virus (HAV) is an enteric picornavirus that causes acute hepatitis in humans. It is highly resistant in the environment, and typically transmitted via the fecaloral route, through exposure to contaminated foods (raw shellfish, strawberries, etc.) or water [1]. In regions where hygiene is poor, the incidence of infection is high and the illness is usually contracted in early childhood and is commonly asymptomatic or mild. In these regions, a high proportion of adults in the population is immune to HAV, and epidemics are uncommon. The infection is less common, but community-wide outbreaks may occur

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