Outbreaks of Astrovirus Gastroenteritis in Day Care Centers
Overview
Affiliations
Objective: This study evaluated astrovirus as a cause of diarrhea outbreaks among infants and toddlers in day care centers.
Design: Stool specimens were collected weekly during four periods (from January 1986 through December 1991) from children 6 to 30 months of age who were enrolled in prospective studies of diarrhea in day care centers. All diarrheal stool specimens were tested for bacterial enteropathogens, rotavirus, enteric adenovirus, and Giardia lamblia. A total of 1365 stool specimens from 70 outbreaks in which no etiologic agent was identified and from another 11 outbreaks with a known cause were tested for astrovirus, by means of a monoclonal antibody-based enzyme immunoassay. Confirmatory testing was performed by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction with primers designed to produce an 89 base-pair product.
Results: Astrovirus was detected in 6 (7%) of the 81 outbreaks. Of 217 children tested, 73 (34%) were infected with astrovirus; infections in 35 (48%) were symptomatic and in 38 (52%) asymptomatic. The six outbreaks lasted 11 to 44 days (median 22 days). Astrovirus excretion was detected for a duration of 2 to 30 days, with excretion occurring from 1 to 8 days (median 2 days) before diarrhea began to 1 to 20 days (median 2 days) after diarrhea ceased. Younger children (< or = 12 months) were at greater risk than older children (p = 0.011) of becoming infected with astrovirus during an outbreak and were more likely (p = 0.015) to have symptoms when infected. Of 24 specimens with astrovirus by enzyme immunoassay, 20 (83%) were confirmed to have the virus by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction.
Conclusion: Astrovirus was an important cause of outbreaks of diarrhea among children attending day care centers, more frequently infected younger children, and often produced asymptomatic infections.
Human Astrovirus Outbreak in a Daycare Center and Propagation among Household Contacts.
Parron I, Plasencia E, Cornejo-Sanchez T, Jane M, Perez C, Izquierdo C Viruses. 2021; 13(6).
PMID: 34207617 PMC: 8229506. DOI: 10.3390/v13061100.
Incubation periods of viral gastroenteritis: a systematic review.
Lee R, Lessler J, Lee R, Rudolph K, Reich N, Perl T BMC Infect Dis. 2013; 13:446.
PMID: 24066865 PMC: 3849296. DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-13-446.
Li C, Liu N, Guo W, Yu Q, Wang W, Song Z J Clin Microbiol. 2010; 48(11):4306-9.
PMID: 20810774 PMC: 3020857. DOI: 10.1128/JCM.00797-10.
[Epidemiology of infectious acute diarrhoea in France and Europe].
Alain S, Denis F Arch Pediatr. 2007; 14 Suppl 3:S132-44.
PMID: 17961805 PMC: 7133232. DOI: 10.1016/s0929-693x(07)80017-0.
Ratcliff R, Doherty J, Higgins G J Clin Microbiol. 2002; 40(11):4091-9.
PMID: 12409380 PMC: 139724. DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.11.4091-4099.2002.