Outbreak of caliciviruses in the Singapore military, 2015

Abstract Background From 31 August to 9 September 2015, a total of 150 military personnel at a military institution in Singapore were infected with acute gastroenteritis (AGE) with an attack rate of approximately 3%. This study aimed to determine the epidemiology of the outbreak, investigate its ori...

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Main Authors: Freddy Jun Xian Neo, Jimmy Jin Phang Loh, Peijun Ting, Wei Xin Yeo, Christine Qiu Han Gao, Vernon Jian Ming Lee, Boon Huan Tan, Ching Ging Ng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-11-01
Series:BMC Infectious Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12879-017-2821-y
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spelling doaj-7a1eb95daf934e00b83811d1ecf184c92020-11-25T03:58:24ZengBMCBMC Infectious Diseases1471-23342017-11-011711810.1186/s12879-017-2821-yOutbreak of caliciviruses in the Singapore military, 2015Freddy Jun Xian Neo0Jimmy Jin Phang Loh1Peijun Ting2Wei Xin Yeo3Christine Qiu Han Gao4Vernon Jian Ming Lee5Boon Huan Tan6Ching Ging Ng7DSO National LaboratoriesDSO National LaboratoriesDSO National LaboratoriesHQ Medical Corps, Singapore Armed ForcesHQ Medical Corps, Singapore Armed ForcesHQ Medical Corps, Singapore Armed ForcesDSO National LaboratoriesDSO National LaboratoriesAbstract Background From 31 August to 9 September 2015, a total of 150 military personnel at a military institution in Singapore were infected with acute gastroenteritis (AGE) with an attack rate of approximately 3%. This study aimed to determine the epidemiology of the outbreak, investigate its origins, and discuss measures to prevent future occurrences. Methods After the AGE outbreak was declared on 31 August 2015, symptom surveys, hygiene inspections, and the testing of water, food, and stool samples were initiated. We collected 86 stool samples from AGE cases and 58 samples from food-handlers during the course of the outbreak and these stool samples were tested for 8 bacterial pathogens and 2 viral pathogens (i.e., norovirus and sapovirus). Results We detected Sapovirus (SaV), group I Norovirus (NoV GI) and group II Norovirus (NoV GII) from the stool samples of AGE cases. Further sequence analyses showed that the AGE outbreak in August was caused mainly by three rarely reported calicivirus novel genotypes: NoV GI.7, NoV GII.17 and SaV GII.3. Control measures implemented focused on the escalation of personal and environmental hygiene, which included the separation of affected and unaffected soldiers, enforcement of rigorous hand-washing and hygiene, raising awareness of food and water safety, and disinfection of communal areas with bleach. Conclusions This study identified both NoV and SaV as the causative agents for an AGE outbreak at a Singapore military camp in August 2015. This study is also the first to report SaV as one of the main causative agents, highlighting the importance of caliciviruses as causative agents of AGE outbreaks in the Singapore military. As there are no commercially available vaccines against caliciviruses, strict personal hygiene and proper disinfection of environmental surfaces remain crucial to prevent calicivirus outbreak and transmission.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12879-017-2821-ySapovirusNorovirusCalicivirusOutbreakMilitarySingapore
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Freddy Jun Xian Neo
Jimmy Jin Phang Loh
Peijun Ting
Wei Xin Yeo
Christine Qiu Han Gao
Vernon Jian Ming Lee
Boon Huan Tan
Ching Ging Ng
spellingShingle Freddy Jun Xian Neo
Jimmy Jin Phang Loh
Peijun Ting
Wei Xin Yeo
Christine Qiu Han Gao
Vernon Jian Ming Lee
Boon Huan Tan
Ching Ging Ng
Outbreak of caliciviruses in the Singapore military, 2015
BMC Infectious Diseases
Sapovirus
Norovirus
Calicivirus
Outbreak
Military
Singapore
author_facet Freddy Jun Xian Neo
Jimmy Jin Phang Loh
Peijun Ting
Wei Xin Yeo
Christine Qiu Han Gao
Vernon Jian Ming Lee
Boon Huan Tan
Ching Ging Ng
author_sort Freddy Jun Xian Neo
title Outbreak of caliciviruses in the Singapore military, 2015
title_short Outbreak of caliciviruses in the Singapore military, 2015
title_full Outbreak of caliciviruses in the Singapore military, 2015
title_fullStr Outbreak of caliciviruses in the Singapore military, 2015
title_full_unstemmed Outbreak of caliciviruses in the Singapore military, 2015
title_sort outbreak of caliciviruses in the singapore military, 2015
publisher BMC
series BMC Infectious Diseases
issn 1471-2334
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Abstract Background From 31 August to 9 September 2015, a total of 150 military personnel at a military institution in Singapore were infected with acute gastroenteritis (AGE) with an attack rate of approximately 3%. This study aimed to determine the epidemiology of the outbreak, investigate its origins, and discuss measures to prevent future occurrences. Methods After the AGE outbreak was declared on 31 August 2015, symptom surveys, hygiene inspections, and the testing of water, food, and stool samples were initiated. We collected 86 stool samples from AGE cases and 58 samples from food-handlers during the course of the outbreak and these stool samples were tested for 8 bacterial pathogens and 2 viral pathogens (i.e., norovirus and sapovirus). Results We detected Sapovirus (SaV), group I Norovirus (NoV GI) and group II Norovirus (NoV GII) from the stool samples of AGE cases. Further sequence analyses showed that the AGE outbreak in August was caused mainly by three rarely reported calicivirus novel genotypes: NoV GI.7, NoV GII.17 and SaV GII.3. Control measures implemented focused on the escalation of personal and environmental hygiene, which included the separation of affected and unaffected soldiers, enforcement of rigorous hand-washing and hygiene, raising awareness of food and water safety, and disinfection of communal areas with bleach. Conclusions This study identified both NoV and SaV as the causative agents for an AGE outbreak at a Singapore military camp in August 2015. This study is also the first to report SaV as one of the main causative agents, highlighting the importance of caliciviruses as causative agents of AGE outbreaks in the Singapore military. As there are no commercially available vaccines against caliciviruses, strict personal hygiene and proper disinfection of environmental surfaces remain crucial to prevent calicivirus outbreak and transmission.
topic Sapovirus
Norovirus
Calicivirus
Outbreak
Military
Singapore
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12879-017-2821-y
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