Serial Food Poisoning Outbreaks Caused by Norovirus-Contaminated Shredded Dried Laver Seaweed Provided at School Lunch, Tokyo, 2017
Autor: | Kana Kimoto, Kenji Sadamasu, Mayuko Oda, Yoshiko Somura, Yasunori Suzuki, Yuta Okutsu, Dai Siki, Tetsuya Akiba, Takayuki Shinkai, Akihiko Hirai, Rei Kato |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Veterinary medicine Time Factors 030106 microbiology Food Contamination medicine.disease_cause Disease Outbreaks Foodborne Diseases 03 medical and health sciences Algae medicine Tokyo Caliciviridae Infections Schools Food poisoning biology Norovirus Outbreak General Medicine Contamination Seaweed biology.organism_classification medicine.disease Lunch RNA Viral Food Analysis Contaminated food |
Zdroj: | Food Hygiene and Safety Science (Shokuhin Eiseigaku Zasshi). 58:260-267 |
ISSN: | 1882-1006 0015-6426 |
DOI: | 10.3358/shokueishi.58.260 |
Popis: | In February 2017, four food poisoning outbreaks occurred in Tokyo, involving ten schools. Shredded dried laver seaweed processed by a single food manufacturer in December 2016 was provided in common for the school meals that caused all four outbreaks. Of 4,209 persons exposed, 1,193 (28.3%) had symptoms of gastroenteritis. Norovirus (NoV) GII was detected in 207 (78.1%) of 265 cases by real-time RT-PCR. Thirty-one shredded dried laver seaweed samples were examined and seven (22.6%) of them were positive for NoV GII. PCR fragments of NoV ORF1/2 junction region (302 bp) from seven shredded dried laver seaweed samples and 20 clinical samples derived from the four outbreaks were sequenced. All of them displayed complete homology, and the genotype was classified as GII.17. A nearly full-length sequence (7,420 bp) of NoV RNA derived from a case was obtained by next-generation sequencer analysis and phylogenetic analysis indicated that this strain belongs to the same cluster as Hu/GII/JP/2015/GII.P17_GII.17/Kawasaki308. Thus, our investigation elucidated that the causative agent of these four serial food poisoning outbreaks was NoV GII.17 and the infectious source was a single batch of shredded dried laver seaweed. The water activity of the shredded dried laver seaweed was found to be 0.119 to 0.129. It was epidemiologically clarified that NoV does not lose infectivity for about two months even in the dry state. We conclude that a large diffuse outbreak of food poisoning caused by NoV GII.17 contamination of shredded dried laver seaweed had occurred in Tokyo. Our elucidation of the causative agent indicated that the food poisoning outbreaks in multiple areas of Japan, including Tokyo, during January to February 2017 were caused by the same contaminated food. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |