Emerging Infectious Diseases (Dec 2020)

Clinical and Multimodal Imaging Findings and Risk Factors for Ocular Involvement in a Presumed Waterborne Toxoplasmosis Outbreak, Brazil

  • Camilo Brandão-de-Resende,
  • Helena Hollanda Santos,
  • Angel Alessio Rojas Lagos,
  • Camila Munayert Lara,
  • Jacqueline Souza Dutra Arruda,
  • Ana Paula Maia Peixoto Marino,
  • Lis Ribeiro do Valle Antonelli,
  • Ricardo Tostes Gazzinelli,
  • Ricardo Wagner de Almeida Vitor,
  • Daniel Vitor Vasconcelos-Santos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2612.200227
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 12
pp. 2922 – 2932

Abstract

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In 2015, an outbreak of presumed waterborne toxoplasmosis occurred in Gouveia, Brazil. We conducted a 3-year prospective study on a cohort of 52 patients from this outbreak, collected clinical and multimodal imaging findings, and determined risk factors for ocular involvement. At baseline examination, 12 (23%) patients had retinochoroiditis; 4 patients had bilateral and 2 had macular lesions. Multimodal imaging revealed 2 distinct retinochoroiditis patterns: necrotizing focal retinochoroiditis and punctate retinochoroiditis. Older age, worse visual acuity, self-reported recent reduction of visual acuity, and presence of floaters were associated with retinochoroiditis. Among patients, persons >40 years of age had 5 times the risk for ocular involvement. Five patients had recurrences during follow-up, a rate of 22% per person-year. Recurrences were associated with binocular involvement. Two patients had late ocular involvement that occurred >34 months after initial diagnosis. Patients with acquired toxoplasmosis should have long-term ophthalmic follow-up, regardless of initial ocular involvement.

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