Skip directly to site content Skip directly to page options Skip directly to A-Z link Skip directly to A-Z link Skip directly to A-Z link
Volume 13, Number 7—July 2007
Letter

Norovirus GII.4 Strains and Outbreaks, Australia

On This Page
Figures
Article Metrics
33
citations of this article
EID Journal Metrics on Scopus

Cite This Article

Figure

Thumbnail of Number of outbreaks reported to the New South Wales Department of Health, January 2004–July 2006.

Figure. Number of outbreaks reported to the New South Wales Department of Health, January 2004–July 2006.

To the Editor: Viral gastroenteritis affects millions of people of all ages worldwide, and some seasonality has been observed in outbreak occurrences (13). During early 2006 in New South Wales (NSW), a marked increase in outbreaks of gastroenteritis occurred (Figure): 155 outbreaks were reported during the first 5 months compared with 88 outbreaks during 2005. During the first 5 months of 2006, the Enteric Pathogens Laboratory–South Eastern Area Laboratory Services (EPL-SEALS) recorded an increase in norovirus in stool samples, detected by using an enzyme immunoassay (IDEIA Norovirus, DakoCytomation, Cambridgeshire, UK). From January through May 2006, the proportion of samples positive for norovirus increased successively: 0/47 (0%), 1/73 (1.4%), 5/169 (3.0%), 8/106 (7.5%), and 93/413 (22.5%). This trend followed the increasing reports of outbreaks made to the NSW Department of Health (Figure). In May, the rate of norovirus detection (22.5%) was significantly greater than that of any other pathogen (Fisher exact test, p<0.0001), including intestinal parasites, foodborne bacterial pathogens (Salmonella, Shigella, and Camplylobacter), and enteric viruses (rotavirus, adenovirus, and astrovirus).

In April 2006, the NSW Department of Health Public Health Real-time Emergency Department Surveillance System (PHREDSS) detected a significant increase in visits for gastroenteritis. This system records cases in real time for each visit to an emergency department from patient demographic information and syndromes diagnosed according to the International Classification of Diseases, version 9, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) (4). Information collected came from a population of >4 million persons, predominantly in the Greater Sydney metropolitan region. During April and May 2006, >8,000 visits for vomiting and diarrhea were recorded in PHREDSS, which is ≈3,000 above the average number of cases for this period for the previous 5 years. During this 8-week period, reports of clinically diagnosed outbreaks in institutional settings also increased; 129 outbreaks affected >3,485 persons. This number of outbreaks is the highest ever reported in the April–May (autumn) period for this region since data for outbreaks (mainly from aged-care facilities, hospitals, childcare centers, and schools) were collected by NSW Department of Health in 2004. Furthermore, laboratories detected norovirus in 37 (28.7%) of 129 outbreaks investigated by public health authorities.

The stool samples examined by EPL-SEALS in May 2006 were from patients treated in public hospitals and nursing homes within the Eastern Sydney and Illawarra regions as well as referred samples from private laboratories serving the Greater Sydney region. Sequencing of a random selection of 15 positive samples representative of the diverse location of case-patients indicated that 10 (66.7%) of 15 were GII.4 genotype. The nucleotide sequence of 266 bp of the N terminus of the capsid gene closely resembled (98%) the sequence of Farmington Hills virus and was 100% identical over the same region to norovirus Rhyl440. The remaining positive strains belonged to GII.3 (4 of 15) and GII.12 (1 of 15). The latter strain, designated Schwerin virus, was previously isolated in outbreaks in Germany during 2000. Two of these sequenced samples were from nursing home outbreaks and typed as GII.3 and GII.4. The association with outbreaks of the remaining 13 sequenced samples is uncertain.

Norovirus epidemics occurred throughout the world in 2002 (5) and 2004 (6) and were characterized by the large number of persons affected, multiple routes of transmission, and persistence of endemicity despite rigorous control efforts. In Australia from 1997 to 2000, a period of high activity occurred, dominated by the GII.4 epidemic strain designated U.S. 95/96 (7). Farmington Hills virus was responsible for subsequent outbreaks in Sydney in 2002 and followed a decline in norovirus outbreaks during 2001. After the 2002 outbreaks in Australia, a period of low norovirus activity persisted before the 2004 emergence of another GII.4 variant, designated Hunter virus (3), which predominated in outbreaks in nursing homes and hospitals. More than 400 outbreaks affecting >15,000 persons occurred in NSW during 2004 (8). The Hunter virus was subsequently determined to be the etiologic agent in hundreds of outbreaks occurring in Holland (9), New Zealand (Gail Greening, pers. comm.), Taiwan, and Japan.

The occurrence of norovirus epidemics in the Australian autumn (March–May) contradicts the perception that the disease is strongly associated with the winter season, when the incidence of respiratory infections increases (2). Indeed, other norovirus outbreaks have previously been reported in the summer season (1,3).The alternating trend of high and low incidence of outbreaks (Figure) may be related to several factors, some of which may have been implicated in these outbreaks. Such factors include development of herd immunity to the dominating strain, which is short-term; emergence of an epidemic strain with no herd immunity; increased genomic variation due to point mutation or recombination (10); or other mechanisms.

Top

Elise T.-V. Tu*, Thanh Nguyen†, Phoebe Lee†, Rowena A. Bull*, Jennie Musto‡, Grant Hansman§, Peter A. White*†, William D. Rawlinson*†, and Christopher J. McIver*†Comments to Author 
Author affiliations: *University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia; †Prince of Wales Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia; ‡New South Wales Department of Health, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia; §National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Tokyo, Japan;

Top

References

  1. Lopman  BA, Reacher  M, Gallimore  C, Adak  GK, Gray  JJ, Brown  DWG. A summertime peak of “winter vomiting disease.” Surveillance of norovirus in England and Wales, 1995 to 2002. BMC Public Health. 2003;3:13. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  2. Mounts  AW, Ando  T, Koopmans  M, Bresee  JS, Noel  J, Glass  RI. Cold weather seasonality of gastroenteritis associated with Norwalk-like viruses. J Infect Dis. 2000;181:S2847. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  3. Miyoshi  T, Uchino  K, Matsuo  M, Ikeda  Y, Yoshida  H, Sibata  H, Characteristics of norovirus outbreaks during a non-epidemic season. Jpn J Infect Dis. 2006;59:1401.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  4. Muscatello  DJ, Churches  T, Kaldor  J, Zheng  W, Chiu  C, Correll  P, An automated, broad-based, near real-time public health surveillance system using presentations to hospital emergency departments in New South Wales, Australia. BMC Public Health. 2005;5:141. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  5. Widdowson  M-A, Cramer  EH, Hadley  L, Bresee  JS, Beard  RS, Bulens  SN, Outbreaks of acute gastroenteritis on cruise ships and on land: identification of a predominant circulating strain of norovirus—United States, 2002. J Infect Dis. 2004;190:2736. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  6. Bull  RA, Tu  ET, McIver  CJ, Rawlinson  WD, White  PA. Emergence of a new norovirus genotype II.4 variant associated with global outbreaks of gastroenteritis. J Clin Microbiol. 2006;44:32733. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  7. White  PA, Hansman  GS, Li  A, Dable  J, Isaacs  M, Ferson  M, Norwalk-like virus 95/96-US strain is a major cause gastroenteritis outbreaks in Australia. J Med Virol. 2002;68:1138. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  8. Telfer  B, Munnoch  S. OzFoodnet—enhancing foodborne disease surveillance across Australia. In: Annual report. Sydney (Australia): New South Wales and Hunter Area Health Service; 2005.
  9. Kroneman  A, Vennema  H, van Duijnhoven  Y, Duizer  E, Koopmans  M. High number of norovirus outbreaks associated with GGII.4 variant in The Netherlands and elsewhere: does this herald a worldwide increase? Euro Surveill. 2004;8.
  10. Bull  RA, Hansman  GS, Clancy  LE, Tanaka  MM, Rawlinson  WD, White  PA. Norovirus recombination in ORF1/ORF2 overlap. Emerg Infect Dis. 2005;11:107985.PubMedGoogle Scholar

Top

Figure

Top

Cite This Article

DOI: 10.3201/eid1307.060999

Related Links

Top

Table of Contents – Volume 13, Number 7—July 2007

EID Search Options
presentation_01 Advanced Article Search – Search articles by author and/or keyword.
presentation_01 Articles by Country Search – Search articles by the topic country.
presentation_01 Article Type Search – Search articles by article type and issue.

Top

Comments

Please use the form below to submit correspondence to the authors or contact them at the following address:

Christopher J. McIver, Department of Microbiology, South Eastern Area Laboratory Service, Prince of Wales Hospital, High St, Randwick, New South Wales 2031, Australia;

Send To

10000 character(s) remaining.

Top

Page created: June 18, 2010
Page updated: June 18, 2010
Page reviewed: June 18, 2010
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
file_external