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- Volume 25, Issue 42, 22/Oct/2020
Eurosurveillance - Volume 25, Issue 42, 22 October 2020
Volume 25, Issue 42, 2020
- Editorial
- Rapid communication
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Zoonotic infection with swine A/H1avN1 influenza virus in a child, Germany, June 2020
A zoonotic A/sw/H1avN1 1C.2.2 influenza virus infection was detected in a German child that presented with influenza-like illness, including high fever. There was a history of close contact with pigs 3 days before symptom onset. The child recovered within 3 days. No other transmissions were observed. Serological investigations of the virus isolate revealed cross-reactions with ferret antisera against influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 virus, indicating a closer antigenic relationship with A(H1N1)pdm09 than with the former seasonal H1N1 viruses.
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A large national outbreak of COVID-19 linked to air travel, Ireland, summer 2020
An outbreak of 59 cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) originated with 13 cases linked by a 7 h, 17% occupancy flight into Ireland, summer 2020. The flight-associated attack rate was 9.8–17.8%. Spread to 46 non-flight cases occurred country-wide. Asymptomatic/pre-symptomatic transmission in-flight from a point source is implicated by 99% homology across the virus genome in five cases travelling from three different continents. Restriction of movement on arrival and robust contact tracing can limit propagation post-flight.
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SARS-CoV-2 antibody prevalence, titres and neutralising activity in an antenatal cohort, United Kingdom, 14 April to 15 June 2020
Sheila F Lumley , David W Eyre , Anna L McNaughton , Alison Howarth , Sarah Hoosdally , Stephanie B Hatch , James Kavanagh , Kevin K Chau , Louise O Downs , Stuart Cox , Laura Dunn , Anita Justice , Susan Wareing , Kate Dingle , Justine Rudkin , Kathryn Auckland , Alexander Fyfe , Jai Bolton , Robert Paton , Alexander J Mentzer , Katie Jeffery , Monique I Andersson , Tim James , Tim E A Peto , Brian D Marsden , Gavin Screaton , Richard J Cornall , Paul Klenerman , Daniel Ebner , David I Stuart , Derrick W Crook , Nicole Stoesser , Stephen H Kennedy , Craig Thompson , Sunetra Gupta and Philippa C MatthewsSARS-CoV-2 IgG screening of 1,000 antenatal serum samples in the Oxford area, United Kingdom, between 14 April and 15 June 2020, yielded a 5.3% seroprevalence, mirroring contemporaneous regional data. Among the 53 positive samples, 39 showed in vitro neutralisation activity, correlating with IgG titre (Pearson’s correlation p<0.0001). While SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence in pregnancy cohorts could potentially inform population surveillance, clinical correlates of infection and immunity in pregnancy, and antenatal epidemiology evolution over time need further study.
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Antimicrobial susceptibility of Neisseria gonorrhoeae in Barcelona during a five-year period, 2013 to 2017
IntroductionIncreasing rates of antimicrobial resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae cause problems for treating gonorrhoea.
AimThis observational study aimed to describe isolates from all patients found infected with N. gonorrhoeae, in Barcelona, Spain, between 2013 and 2017, and with available antimicrobial susceptibility data.
MethodsMinimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of penicillin (PEN), cefixime (CFM), ceftriaxone (CRO), azithromycin (AZM), ciprofloxacin (CIP), spectinomycin (SPT), fosfomycin (FOF) and gentamicin (GEN) were determined by E-test. Susceptibility was assessed using clinical breakpoints from the European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing. Time trends for PEN, CFM, AZM and CIP were investigated using logistic regression.
ResultsOf 1,979 patients with infection (2,036 isolates), 1,888 (95.4%) were men. Patient median age was 32 years. The proportions of isolates resistant to extended-spectrum cephalosporins were low, with 0.3% (5/1,982) resistant to CRO and 4.9% (98/1,985) to CFM. AZM resistance prevalence was 2.7% (52/1,981), including 16 isolates detected in 2016 and 2017, with high-level resistance. For CIP, 51.3% (1,018/1,986) of isolates were resistant, and for PEN, 20.1% (399/1,985). All isolates were susceptible to SPT. MIC50 and MIC90 values of GEN were 4 and 6 mg/L and of FOF 12 and 24 mg/L, respectively. Between 2013 and 2017, PEN and CFM resistance rates each decreased from 28.1% (92/327) to 12.2% (70/572) and from 8.3% (27/327) to 4.4% (25/572) (p ≤ 0.0073). In contrast, AZM resistance prevalence appeared to increase from 1.5% in 2014 (5/340) to 3.0% (17/572) in 2017. No trend was identified for CIP.
ConclusionAntimicrobial susceptibility surveillance is important to timely detect new phenotypes and trends.
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Detection of neutralising antibodies to SARS-CoV-2 to determine population exposure in Scottish blood donors between March and May 2020
Craig P Thompson , Nicholas E Grayson , Robert S Paton , Jai S Bolton , José Lourenço , Bridget S Penman , Lian N Lee , Valerie Odon , Juthathip Mongkolsapaya , Senthil Chinnakannan , Wanwisa Dejnirattisai , Matthew Edmans , Alex Fyfe , Carol Imlach , Kreepa Kooblall , Nicholas Lim , Chang Liu , César López-Camacho , Carol McInally , Anna L McNaughton , Narayan Ramamurthy , Jeremy Ratcliff , Piyada Supasa , Oliver Sampson , Beibei Wang , Alexander J Mentzer , Marc Turner , Malcolm G Semple , Kenneth Baillie , ISARIC4C Investigators , Heli Harvala , Gavin R Screaton , Nigel Temperton , Paul Klenerman , Lisa M Jarvis , Sunetra Gupta and Peter SimmondsBackgroundThe progression and geographical distribution of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection in the United Kingdom (UK) and elsewhere is unknown because typically only symptomatic individuals are diagnosed. We performed a serological study of blood donors in Scotland in the spring of 2020 to detect neutralising antibodies to SARS-CoV-2 as a marker of past infection and epidemic progression.
AimOur objective was to determine if sera from blood bank donors can be used to track the emergence and progression of the SARS-CoV-2 epidemic.
MethodsA pseudotyped SARS-CoV-2 virus microneutralisation assay was used to detect neutralising antibodies to SARS-CoV-2. The study comprised samples from 3,500 blood donors collected in Scotland between 17 March and 18 May 2020. Controls were collected from 100 donors in Scotland during 2019.
ResultsAll samples collected on 17 March 2020 (n = 500) were negative in the pseudotyped SARS-CoV-2 virus microneutralisation assay. Neutralising antibodies were detected in six of 500 donors from 23 to 26 March. The number of samples containing neutralising antibodies did not significantly rise after 5–6 April until the end of the study on 18 May. We found that infections were concentrated in certain postcodes, indicating that outbreaks of infection were extremely localised. In contrast, other areas remained comparatively untouched by the epidemic.
ConclusionAlthough blood donors are not representative of the overall population, we demonstrated that serosurveys of blood banks can serve as a useful tool for tracking the emergence and progression of an epidemic such as the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak.
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Volumes & issues
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Volume 29 (2024)
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Volume 28 (2023)
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Volume 27 (2022)
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Volume 26 (2021)
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Volume 25 (2020)
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Volume 24 (2019)
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Volume 23 (2018)
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Volume 22 (2017)
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Volume 21 (2016)
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Volume 20 (2015)
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Volume 19 (2014)
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Volume 18 (2013)
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Volume 17 (2012)
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Volume 16 (2011)
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Volume 15 (2010)
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Volume 14 (2009)
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Volume 13 (2008)
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Volume 12 (2007)
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Volume 11 (2006)
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Volume 10 (2005)
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Volume 9 (2004)
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Volume 8 (2003)
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Volume 7 (2002)
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Volume 6 (2001)
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Volume 5 (2000)
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Volume 4 (1999)
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Volume 3 (1998)
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Volume 2 (1997)
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Volume 1 (1996)
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Volume 0 (1995)
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Detection of 2019 novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) by real-time RT-PCR
Victor M Corman , Olfert Landt , Marco Kaiser , Richard Molenkamp , Adam Meijer , Daniel KW Chu , Tobias Bleicker , Sebastian Brünink , Julia Schneider , Marie Luisa Schmidt , Daphne GJC Mulders , Bart L Haagmans , Bas van der Veer , Sharon van den Brink , Lisa Wijsman , Gabriel Goderski , Jean-Louis Romette , Joanna Ellis , Maria Zambon , Malik Peiris , Herman Goossens , Chantal Reusken , Marion PG Koopmans and Christian Drosten
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