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An outbreak of hepatitis A virus infection in a secondary school in England with no undetected asymptomatic transmission among students

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 December 2022

A. Wensley
Affiliation:
Field Service, United Kingdom Health Security Agency, Leeds, UK
E. Smout
Affiliation:
Field Service, United Kingdom Health Security Agency, Leeds, UK Field Epidemiology Training Programme, United Kingdom Health Security Agency, London, UK
S.-L. Ngui
Affiliation:
Virus Reference Department, United Kingdom Health Security Agency, London, UK
K. Balogun
Affiliation:
Clinical Public Health, United Kingdom Health Security Agency, London, UK
P. Blomquist
Affiliation:
Field Epidemiology Training Programme, United Kingdom Health Security Agency, London, UK Field Service, United Kingdom Health Security Agency, Liverpool, UK
M. Edelstein
Affiliation:
Clinical Public Health, United Kingdom Health Security Agency, London, UK
R. Greenwood
Affiliation:
Yorkshire and Humber Health Protection Team, United Kingdom Health Security Agency, Leeds, UK
S. Coles
Affiliation:
Yorkshire and Humber Health Protection Team, United Kingdom Health Security Agency, Leeds, UK
K. Ingold
Affiliation:
North Yorkshire County Council, North Yorkshire, UK
L. Sargeant
Affiliation:
North Yorkshire County Council, North Yorkshire, UK
M. Gent
Affiliation:
Yorkshire and Humber Health Protection Team, United Kingdom Health Security Agency, Leeds, UK
S. Padfield
Affiliation:
Yorkshire and Humber Health Protection Team, United Kingdom Health Security Agency, Leeds, UK
G. J. Hughes*
Affiliation:
Field Service, United Kingdom Health Security Agency, Leeds, UK
*
Author for correspondence: G. J. Hughes, E-mail: gareth.hughes@ukhsa.gov.uk
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Abstract

In June 2019 the Health Protection Team in Yorkshire and Humber, England, was notified of cases of hepatitis A virus (HAV) infection in staff at a secondary school. Investigation revealed that an earlier case worked as a food handler in the school kitchen. Indirect transmission through food from the canteen was considered the most likely route of transmission. Cases were described according to setting of exposure. Oral fluid was obtained from students for serological testing. Environmental investigations were undertaken at settings where food handling was considered a potential transmission risk. Thirty-three confirmed cases were linked to the outbreak. All of those tested (n = 31) shared the same sequence with a HAV IB genotype. The first three cases were a household cluster and included the index case for the school. A further 19 cases (16 students, 3 staff) were associated with the school and consistent with indirect exposure to the food handler. One late onset case could not be ruled out as a secondary case within the school and resulted in vaccination of the school population. Five cases were linked to a bakery where a case from the initial household cluster worked as a food server. No concerns about hygiene standards were noted at either the school or the bakery. Oral fluid samples taken at the time of vaccination from asymptomatic students (n = 219, 11–16 years-old) showed no evidence of recent or current infection. This outbreak included household and foodborne transmission but limited (and possibly zero) person-to-person transmission among secondary school students. Where adequate hygiene exists, secondary transmission within older students may not occur.

Information

Type
Original Paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that no alterations are made and the original article is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained prior to any commercial use and/or adaptation of the article.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Distribution of cases of confirmed hepatitis A virus infection by likely setting of exposure (all cases) (a) and for school-associated cases only (b) and bakery-associated cases only (c). The expected interval of symptom onset dates for school- and bakery-associated cases is based on mean (dark grey bar) and range (light grey bar) of the incubation period for HAV infection. The interval assumes exposure of individuals during the working days when a food handler was likely infectious at the setting (indicted by open circles). 1–3 = indicate first three cases, as described in the main text * Community cases include the household contacts (cases 1 & 2) of the first case among school staff (case 3). ** Household contacts are contacts of a school case. B = cases linked to Bakery C.