» Articles » PMID: 8150941

Norwalk Virus-associated Gastroenteritis Traced to Ice Consumption Aboard a Cruise Ship in Hawaii: Comparison and Application of Molecular Method-based Assays

Overview
Specialty Microbiology
Date 1994 Feb 1
PMID 8150941
Citations 21
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Investigation of an outbreak of acute nonbacterial gastroenteritis on a cruise ship provided an opportunity to assess new molecular method-based diagnostic methods for Norwalk virus (NV) and the antibody response to NV infection. The outbreak began within 36 h of embarkation and affected 30% of 672 passengers and crew. No single meal, seating, or food item was implicated in the transmission of NV, but a passenger's risk of illness was associated with the amount of ice (but not water) consumed (chi-square for trend, P = 0.009). Of 19 fecal specimens examined, 7 were found to contain 27-nm NV-like particles by electron microscopy and 16 were positive by PCR with very sensitive NV-specific primers, but only 5 were positive by a new highly specific antigen enzyme immunoassay for NV. Ten of 12 serum specimen pairs demonstrated a fourfold or greater rise in antibody titer to recombinant baculovirus-expressed NV antigen. The amplified PCR band shared only 81% nucleotide sequence homology with the reference NV strain, which may explain the lack of utility of the fecal specimen enzyme immunoassay. This report, the first to document the use of these molecular method-based assays for investigation of an outbreak, demonstrates the importance of highly sensitive viral diagnostics such as PCR and serodiagnosis for the epidemiologic investigation of NV gastroenteritis.

Citing Articles

Systematic literature review and meta-analysis on preventing and controlling norovirus outbreaks on cruise ships, 1990 to 2020: calling for behaviour change strategies of travellers.

Mouchtouri V, Simou E, Soteriades S, Rousou X, Kontouli K, Kafetsouli D Euro Surveill. 2024; 29(10).

PMID: 38456215 PMC: 10986668. DOI: 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2024.29.10.2300345.


Occurrence of Human Enteric Viruses in Shellfish along the Production and Distribution Chain in Sicily, Italy.

Macaluso G, Guercio A, Gucciardi F, Di Bella S, La Rosa G, Suffredini E Foods. 2021; 10(6).

PMID: 34203938 PMC: 8232761. DOI: 10.3390/foods10061384.


Ozone efficacy for the control of airborne viruses: Bacteriophage and norovirus models.

Dubuis M, Dumont-Leblond N, Laliberte C, Veillette M, Turgeon N, Jean J PLoS One. 2020; 15(4):e0231164.

PMID: 32275685 PMC: 7147755. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0231164.


Molecular Diagnostic Methods for Detection and Characterization of Human Noroviruses.

Chen H, Hu Y Open Microbiol J. 2016; 10:78-89.

PMID: 27335620 PMC: 4899541. DOI: 10.2174/1874285801610010078.


Norovirus outbreaks on commercial cruise ships: a systematic review and new targets for the public health agenda.

Bert F, Scaioli G, Gualano M, Passi S, Specchia M, Cadeddu C Food Environ Virol. 2014; 6(2):67-74.

PMID: 24838574 DOI: 10.1007/s12560-014-9145-5.


References
1.
Thomas D . Exact and asymptotic methods for the combination of 2 times 2 tables. Comput Biomed Res. 1975; 8(5):423-46. DOI: 10.1016/0010-4809(75)90048-8. View

2.
Monroe S, Stine S, Jiang X, Estes M, Glass R . Detection of antibody to recombinant Norwalk virus antigen in specimens from outbreaks of gastroenteritis. J Clin Microbiol. 1993; 31(11):2866-72. PMC: 266146. DOI: 10.1128/jcm.31.11.2866-2872.1993. View

3.
Reid J, Caul E, White D, Palmer S . Role of infected food handler in hotel outbreak of Norwalk-like viral gastroenteritis: implications for control. Lancet. 1988; 2(8606):321-3. DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(88)92367-7. View

4.
Ho M, Glass R, Monroe S, Madore H, Stine S, Pinsky P . Viral gastroenteritis aboard a cruise ship. Lancet. 1989; 2(8669):961-5. DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(89)90964-1. View

5.
Xi J, Graham D, Wang K, Estes M . Norwalk virus genome cloning and characterization. Science. 1990; 250(4987):1580-3. DOI: 10.1126/science.2177224. View