PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Key Role of Sequencing to Trace Hepatitis A Viruses Circulating in Italy During a Large Multi-Country European Foodborne Outbreak in 2013.

  • Roberto Bruni,
  • Stefania Taffon,
  • Michele Equestre,
  • Paola Chionne,
  • Elisabetta Madonna,
  • Caterina Rizzo,
  • Maria Elena Tosti,
  • Valeria Alfonsi,
  • Lara Ricotta,
  • Dario De Medici,
  • Simona Di Pasquale,
  • Gaia Scavia,
  • Enrico Pavoni,
  • Marina Nadia Losio,
  • Luisa Romanò,
  • Alessandro Remo Zanetti,
  • Anna Morea,
  • Monia Pacenti,
  • Giorgio Palù,
  • Maria Rosaria Capobianchi,
  • Maria Chironna,
  • Maria Grazia Pompa,
  • Anna Rita Ciccaglione,
  • Italian National Task Force on Hepatitis A

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149642
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. e0149642

Abstract

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Foodborne Hepatitis A Virus (HAV) outbreaks are being recognized as an emerging public health problem in industrialized countries. In 2013 three foodborne HAV outbreaks occurred in Europe and one in USA. During the largest of the three European outbreaks, most cases occurred in Italy (>1,200 cases as of March 31, 2014). A national Task Force was established at the beginning of the outbreak by the Ministry of Health. Mixed frozen berries were early demonstrated to be the source of infection by the identity of viral sequences in patients and in food. In the present study the molecular characterization of HAV isolates from 355 Italian cases is reported.Molecular characterization was carried out by PCR/sequencing (VP1/2A region), comparison with reference strains and phylogenetic analysis.A unique strain was responsible for most characterized cases (235/355, 66.1%). Molecular data had a key role in tracing this outbreak, allowing 110 out of the 235 outbreak cases (46.8%) to be recognized in absence of any other link. The data also showed background circulation of further unrelated strains, both autochthonous and travel related, whose sequence comparison highlighted minor outbreaks and small clusters, most of them unrecognized on the basis of epidemiological data. Phylogenetic analysis showed most isolates from travel related cases clustering with reference strains originating from the same geographical area of travel.In conclusion, the study documents, in a real outbreak context, the crucial role of molecular analysis in investigating an old but re-emerging pathogen. Improving the molecular knowledge of HAV strains, both autochthonous and circulating in countries from which potentially contaminated foods are imported, will become increasingly important to control outbreaks by supporting trace back activities, aiming to identify the geographical source(s) of contaminated food, as well as public health interventions.