2024-09-19 ペンシルベニア州立大学(PennState)
<関連情報>
- https://www.psu.edu/news/research/story/wastewater-monitoring-can-detect-foodborne-illness-researchers-find
- https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/jcm.00825-24
廃水から検出されたアウトブレイク関連のサルモネラ・ベイルドンは、下水モニタリングが従来の疾病サーベイランスをどのように補完できるかを示している Outbreak-associated Salmonella Baildon found in wastewater demonstrates how sewage monitoring can supplement traditional disease surveillance
Nkuchia M. M’ikanatha, Zoe S. Goldblum, Nicholas Cesari, Erin M. Nawrocki, Yezhi Fu, Jasna Kovac, Edward G. Dudley
Journal of Clinical Microbiology Published:19 September 2024
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1128/jcm.00825-24
ABSTRACT
Non-typhoidal Salmonella is a common cause of gastroenteritis worldwide, but current non-typhoidal Salmonella surveillance is suboptimal. Here, we evaluated the utility of wastewater monitoring to enhance traditional surveillance for this foodborne pathogen. In June 2022, we tested raw sewage collected twice a week from two treatment plants in central Pennsylvania for non-typhoidal Salmonella and characterized isolates using whole-genome sequencing. We recovered 43 Salmonella isolates from wastewater samples, differentiated by genomic analysis into seven serovars: 16 Panama (37.2%), 9 Senftenberg (20.9%), 8 Baildon (18.6%), and 3 or fewer of four other serovars. We assessed genetic relatedness and epidemiologic links between these wastewater isolates with those from patients with salmonellosis. All S. Baildon isolates from wastewater were genetically similar to those associated with a known contemporaneous salmonellosis outbreak. S. Baildon from wastewater and 42 outbreak-related isolates in the national outbreak detection database had the same core genome multilocus sequence typing, and outbreak code differed by zero or one single polynucleotide polymorphism. One of the 42 outbreak-related isolates was obtained from a patient residing in the wastewater sample collection catchment area, which serves approximately 17000 people. S. Baildon is a rare serovar (reported in <1% cases nationally, over five years). Our study underscores the value of monitoring sewage from a defined population to supplement traditional surveillance methods for the evidence of Salmonella infections and to determine the extent of outbreaks.