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Norovirus Activity New Hampshire, 2006-2007. Beth Daly, MPH Communicable Disease Epidemiologist Communicable Disease Surveillance Section NHICEP Meeting March 13, 2007. Viral Gastroenteritis. Several viruses cause gastroenteritis
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Norovirus Activity New Hampshire, 2006-2007 Beth Daly, MPH Communicable Disease Epidemiologist Communicable Disease Surveillance Section NHICEP Meeting March 13, 2007 NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Viral Gastroenteritis • Several viruses cause gastroenteritis • rotavirus, noroviruses, adenoviruses, sapoviruses, and astroviruses • Symptoms are often similar among etiologies, often unable to distinguish clinically • CDC: each year 23 million cases of acute gastroenteritis are due to norovirus infection • At least 50% of all foodborne outbreaks of gastroenteritis can be attributed to noroviruses NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Norovirus • Genus name of a group of of related, single-stranded RNA, nonenveloped viruses • Member of the Caliciviridae family which includes four viral genera: • Lagovirus, Vesivirus, Sapovirus, Norovirus • Only sapovirus and norovirus can infect humans • Previously known as “Norwalk-like Viruses” • Norwalk virus is just one type of virus in the Norovirus genus • Norwalk virus named for original strain which caused an outbreak in Norwalk, Ohio in 1968 NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Norovirus Genogroups • There are five norovirus genogroups (divided into at least 31 genetic clusters) • Only 3 of these genogroups can infect humans (GI, GII, GIV) • Genogroup GI: Norwalk virus, Southampton virus, Desert Shield virus • Genogroup GII: Hawaii virus, Snow Mountain agent, Toronto virus (GII/3) • Genogroup GIV: Ft. Lauderdale virus NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Clinical Presentation • Incubation period: 24-48 hours • median in outbreaks 36 hours • Acute-onset: • vomiting, watery non-bloody diarrhea, abdominal cramps, nausea • Symptoms may vary based on genogroup • Dehydration most common complication • Results in reversible lesions in jejunum • precise mechanism diarrhea and vomiting unknown • Symptoms last 24 to 60 hours • Recovery is complete and no evidence of serious long-term effects • Asymptomatic in 30% of infections • role in transmission unknown NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
HANDS FOOD ES H2O AIR Transmission • Humans only known reservoir • Some noroviruses present in swine, cattle, and mice, but these genogroups do not infect humans • Transmitted primarily fecal-oral • consumption of contaminated food/water • direct person-to-person spread • Environmental/fomite contamination • Good evidence exists for transmission due to aerosolization of vomitus • droplets contaminating surfaces or entering oral mucosa and swallowed • Multiple routes seen in outbreaks NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Transmission • Highly infectious • As few as 10 viral particles may be sufficient for infection • Viral shedding usually begins with onset of symptoms • Presymptomatic shedding may occur • Shedding may continue for 2 weeks after recovery • Unclear to what extent viral shedding 72 hours after recovery signifies continued infectivity NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
MMWR 2001; 50: RR-9 NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Immunity • Immunity may be strain-specific • lasts only a few months • individuals are likely to be repeatedly infected throughout their lifetimes. • Antibodies to the virus are noted initially in young children ages 3 to 4 • Antibody prevalence exceeds 50% by age 50 NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Immunity and Blood Type • Susceptibility to infection may be genetically determined • People with blood group O at greatest risk for severe infection • Noroviruses bind to several histo-blood group antigens and different genogroups have differing affinity for ABO antigens • GI noroviruses preferentially recognize blood group antigens A and O • GII noroviruses preferentially recognize blood group antigens A and B NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Diagnosis • RT-PCR detects norovirus RNA • can be used to test stool and emesis samples • NH PHL requests stool • Identification of virus can be best made from stool taken within 48 to 72 hours after onset • good results can be obtained on samples taken as long as 5 days after onset • Virus can sometimes be found in stool samples taken 2 weeks after recovery NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Epidemiology • CDC estimates 23 million cases of norovirus each year in US • In NH, norovirus is not reportable • Outbreaks are reportable • What defines an outbreak? • Transmission within the facility? • Higher than normal number of cases? NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Reported Outbreaks of Viral Gastroenteritis, 2002-2007 NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Reported Outbreaks of Viral Gastroenteritis, 2002-2007 NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
2006-2007 Norovirus Season • Between December 1st-March 1st • 64 outbreaks of norovirus/norovirus-like illness in institutional settings • 55 (86%) in longterm care facilities • 4 (6%) in acute care hospitals • 5 (8%) in schools • 50 (78%) outbreaks submitted stool specimens • 25 (39%) met CDC criteria for a confirmed norovirus outbreak (≥ 2 positive specimens) • 18 (28%) had one positive stool specimen • Increase seen across the United States • CDC believes increase due to new strain NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Control- Public Health • Notify the NH DHHS Disease Control Section immediately if you suspect an outbreak in your facility • Follow NH DHHS Guidelines for Control of GI Outbreaks in Institutional Settings • Collect stool specimens • Be sure to label lab requisition form with the word “OUTBREAK” and your Facility Name • Also helpful if you could write name of NH DHHS public health nurse you’re working with NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Control- Patient/Resident • Stop all group activities • Consider alternate ways of feeding the ill to prevent them from dining in common areas • Restrict/defer admission to affected areas for two incubation periods after last case • Notify visitors and encourage handwashing during/after visits NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Control- Staffing Issues • Staff with GI symptoms should remain out of work until 48 hours after symptom resolution • Exclude non-essential staff from affected areas • Interrupt movement of inter-department staff if possible • Staff should frequently wash hands using soap and water during suspect norovirus outbreaks • Use gloves and aprons whenever contacting an affected individual or contaminated environment NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Control- Environmental • Noroviruses resistant to environmental challenge • they are able to survive freezing • temperatures as high as 60°C • and have even been associated with illness after being steamed in shellfish • can survive in up to 10 ppm chlorine well in excess of levels routinely present in public water systems • CDC recommends cleaning surfaces with 1000 ppm household bleach • equivalent to 5 tablespoons per gallon • Can other cleaners be used? NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Nucleic acid genome (DNA or RNA) Protein shell (capsid) Lipid-protein envelope 20-300 nanometers diameter What about Alcohol Based Hand Sanitizers? • Attacks protein envelope of the virus • Noroviruses are non-enveloped! NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services
Thank you! Questions/Comments? Contact NH DHHS to report suspect outbreaks and to receive disease control recommendations and support Office: 271-4496 After Hours: 800-852-3345 ext. 5300 NH Department of Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services