2015 Epidemic of Severe Streptococcus agalactiae Sequence Type 283 Infections in Singapore Associated With the Consumption of Raw Freshwater Fish: A …

S Kalimuddin, SL Chen, CTK Lim… - Clinical Infectious …, 2017 - academic.oup.com
S Kalimuddin, SL Chen, CTK Lim, TH Koh, TY Tan, M Kam, CW Wong, KS Mehershahi…
Clinical Infectious Diseases, 2017academic.oup.com
Background. Streptococcus agalactiae (group B Streptococcus [GBS]) has not been
described as a foodborne pathogen. However, in 2015, a large outbreak of severe invasive
sequence type (ST) 283 GBS infections in adults epidemiologically linked to the
consumption of raw freshwater fish occurred in Singapore. We attempted to determine the
scale of the outbreak, define the clinical spectrum of disease, and link the outbreak to
contaminated fish. Methods. Time-series analysis was performed on microbiology laboratory …
Background
Streptococcus agalactiae (group B Streptococcus [GBS]) has not been described as a foodborne pathogen. However, in 2015, a large outbreak of severe invasive sequence type (ST) 283 GBS infections in adults epidemiologically linked to the consumption of raw freshwater fish occurred in Singapore. We attempted to determine the scale of the outbreak, define the clinical spectrum of disease, and link the outbreak to contaminated fish.
Methods
Time-series analysis was performed on microbiology laboratory data. Food handlers and fishmongers were screened for enteric carriage of GBS. A retrospective cohort study was conducted to assess differences in demographic and clinical characteristics of patients with invasive ST283 and non-ST283 infections. Whole-genome sequencing was performed on human and fish ST283 isolates from Singapore, Thailand, and Hong Kong.
Results
The outbreak was estimated to have started in late January 2015. Within the study cohort of 408 patients, ST283 accounted for 35.8% of cases. Patients with ST283 infection were younger and had fewer comorbidities but were more likely to develop meningoencephalitis, septic arthritis, and spinal infection. Of 82 food handlers and fishmongers screened, none carried ST283. Culture of 43 fish samples yielded 13 ST283-positive samples. Phylogenomic analysis of 161 ST283 isolates from humans and fish revealed they formed a tight clade distinguished by 93 single-nucleotide polymorphisms.
Conclusions
ST283 is a zoonotic GBS clone associated with farmed freshwater fish, capable of causing severe disease in humans. It caused a large foodborne outbreak in Singapore and poses both a regional and potentially more widespread threat.
Oxford University Press