Hostname: page-component-89b8bd64d-mmrw7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-05-06T23:20:38.410Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Regional investigation of a cyclosporiasis outbreak linked to imported romaine lettuce – Nebraska and Iowa, June–August 2013

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 October 2015

B. F. BUSS*
Affiliation:
Division of Public Health, Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, Lincoln, NE, USA Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA
M. V. JOSHI
Affiliation:
Division of Public Health, Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, Lincoln, NE, USA University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE, USA
A. L. O'KEEFE
Affiliation:
Douglas County Health Department, Omaha, NE, USA
C. D. ALLENSWORTH
Affiliation:
Douglas County Health Department, Omaha, NE, USA
A. GARVEY
Affiliation:
Division of Acute Disease Prevention, Emergency Response, and Environmental Health, Iowa Department of Public Health, Des Moines, IA, USA
K. OBBINK
Affiliation:
Division of Acute Disease Prevention, Emergency Response, and Environmental Health, Iowa Department of Public Health, Des Moines, IA, USA
S. MANDERNACH
Affiliation:
Iowa Department of Inspections and Appeals, Des Moines, IA, USA
T. J. SAFRANEK
Affiliation:
Division of Public Health, Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, Lincoln, NE, USA
*
* Author for correspondence: B. F. Buss, DVM, MPH, DACVPM, CDC Career Epidemiology Field Officer (CEFO), Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, 301 Centennial Mall South, PO Box 95026, Lincoln, NE 68509, USA. (Email: bryan.buss@nebraska.gov)
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Summary

A regional, multistate investigation into a June–August 2013 cyclosporiasis outbreak was conducted in Nebraska, Iowa, and neighbouring states. Cases were confirmed on the basis of laboratory and clinical findings. Of 227 cases in Iowa (n = 140) and Nebraska (n = 87) residents, 162 (71%) reported dining at chain A/B restaurants – 96% reported house salad consumption. A case-control study identified chain A/B house salad as the most likely vehicle. Traceback was conducted to ascertain production lot codes of bagged salad mix (iceberg and romaine lettuce, red cabbage, and carrots) served as house salad in implicated restaurants. A single production lot code of salad mix supplied by both a common producer and distributor was linked to the majority of confirmed cases in persons reporting regional chain A/B exposure. The salad mix linked to illnesses contained imported romaine lettuce from two separate single-grower fields-of-origin and ⩾1 additional field from another grower.

Information

Type
Original Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 
Figure 0

Fig. 1. General overview of the possible distribution channels* by which potentially contaminated producer A salad mix was supplied from Mexico-origin growers and fields (growing lots) through distributor X† to chain A/B restaurants in Iowa, Nebraska, and surrounding states, May–June 2013. (* This flowchart is provided only as an overview of the distribution channels described in the text and associated tables. Accordingly, the channels depicted are not intended to demonstrate product movement to any specific final end point-of-service. † Distributor X did not have a single physical location. Product was delivered directly to the various distribution hubs by producer A.)

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Number of cyclosporiasis cases meeting case definition (N = 227) by date of onset and reported exposure, Iowa and Nebraska, June–August 2013. * Calculated onset date estimate using 12 days prior to specimen collection (observed mean for all cases).

Figure 2

Table 1. Chain A/B restaurant food exposures reported by patrons (N = 77) in a cyclosporiasis investigation and corresponding odds ratios, Douglas County, Nebraska, June–July 2013

Figure 3

Fig. 3. Distribution channels for producer A salad mix supplied by distributor X distribution hubs to chain A/B restaurants:*† including those (n = 26) reported by persons confirmed with cyclosporiasis (N = 169‡), June–August 2013. (* Three distribution channels as provided by distributor X not depicted: from the Wisconsin distribution hub to a Michigan chain A/B restaurant where no illnesses were reported, and from both the Missouri and Illinois hubs to Wisconsin chain A/B restaurants (unable to verify the accuracy of the latter two; no illnesses were reported in these two restaurants). † Locations of all chain A/B restaurants and distribution hubs depicted herein are not intended to represent the specific geographical locations within the states in which they are located. No illnesses were reported in South Dakota but one chain A/B restaurant in the state was linked to a confirmed ill Iowa resident. ‡ Thirteen (7·7%) of 169 confirmed ill persons who reported chain A/B exposure but could not recall exact location of dining are not represented in this map.)

Figure 4

Table 2. Number of persons with confirmed cyclosporiasis reporting restaurant chain A/B exposure by state and illness onset date, Nebraska and Iowa region, 2013

Figure 5

Table 3. Number of confirmed cyclosporiasis cases (N = 169) reported by distributor X distribution hub state and hub-specific mean, median, and range per chain A/B restaurant, Nebraska and Iowa region, 2013

Figure 6

Fig. 4. Number of chain A/B restaurant exposures* by dates of dining and timing of corresponding distributor X deliveries of producer A salad mix by production lot codes, May and June 2013. (* Chain A/B restaurant exposure defined as dining reported by a confirmed ill person who recalled exact date of patronage and house salad consumption within 14 days prior to illness onset. † Six Iowa (n = 3), Kansas (n = 2) and Missouri (n = 1) residents reported exposure in Nebraska. One Iowan reported exposure in South Dakota on 13 June. ‡ Ten Iowa residents dined 18–22 June 2013 in five restaurants all probably served by distributor X hubs that had received grower Y/ranch Z/lot S romaine-containing salad mix on both 7 and 10 June for subsequent delivery. § Lot specific restaurant delivery information was not retained by the distributor so only groups of lots reported as being delivered in shipments. ¶ For product shipped both 7 and 10 June, grower Y/ranch Z/lot S romaine-containing products were shipped from producer A to distribution hubs in Nebraska, Iowa, and Illinois (Table 4). Restaurant-specific delivery information was not available for the Iowa or Illinois hubs to definitively link product to reported exposures. However, grower Y/ranch Z/lot S romaine was supplied by the Nebraska hub on both 14 and 17 June to an Iowa chain A/B restaurant where one confirmed ill Iowan reported exposure on 18 June 2013. # For salad-mix product shipped on 14 June, no restaurant-specific delivery information was available except for the Nebraska hub. However, grower Y/ranch Z/lot S romaine-containing salad-mix product had been shipped by producer A for subsequent delivery from hubs in Nebraska, Iowa, Wisconsin, and Illinois. The Missouri hub also received a slightly larger amount from this shipment than each of the other distribution hubs but romaine grower was unknown. ** For product shipped on and after 17 June, no restaurant-specific delivery information was available. However, grower Y/ranch Z/lot S romaine was no longer included in any producer A salad-mix shipments.

Figure 7

Table 4. Romaine lettuce grower of producer A salad-mix shipments to distributor X distribution hubs by production lot code, shipping date, and state with number of linked cyclosporiasis cases per hub, Nebraska and Iowa region, 2013

Supplementary material: File

Buss supplementary material

Table S1-S3

Download Buss supplementary material(File)
File 24.5 KB