Marked increase in leptospirosis infections in humans and dogs in the Netherlands, 2014

Author:

Pijnacker Roan1,Goris Marga G.A.2,te Wierik Margreet J.M.1,Broens Els M.3,van der Giessen Joke W.B.14,de Rosa Mauro15,Wagenaar Jaap A.34,Hartskeerl Rudy A.2,Notermans Daan W.1,Maassen Kitty1,Schimmer Barbara1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Infectious Disease Control (CIb), National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Bilthoven, the Netherlands

2. Leptospirosis Reference Centre, Royal Tropical Institute (KIT), KIT Biomedical Research, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

3. Department of Infectious Diseases and Immunology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands

4. Central Veterinary Institute of Wageningen University and Research centre (WUR), Wageningen, the Netherlands

5. Veterinarian Incident and Crisiscentre, Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority (NVWA), Utrecht, the Netherlands

Abstract

In the Netherlands, 97 human leptospirosis cases were notified in 2014. This represents a 4.6-fold increase in autochthonous cases (n = 60) compared with the annual average between 2010 and 2013. Most cases had symptom onset between June and November. This marked increase in humans coincided with an increase of leptospirosis in dogs. In 2014, 13 dogs with leptospirosis were reported, compared with two to six dogs annually from 2010 to 2013. The majority of the autochthonous cases (n = 20) were linked to recreational exposure, e.g. swimming or fishing, followed by occupational exposure (n = 15). About sixty per cent (n = 37) of the autochthonous cases were most likely attributable to surface water contact, and 13 cases to direct contact with animals, mainly rats. A possible explanation for this increase is the preceding mild winter of 2013–2014 followed by the warmest year in three centuries, possibly enabling rodents and Leptospira spp. to survive better. A slight increase in imported leptospirosis was also observed in Dutch tourists (n = 33) most of whom acquired their infection in Thailand (n = 18). More awareness and early recognition of this mainly rodent-borne zoonosis by medical and veterinary specialists is warranted.

Publisher

European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (ECDC)

Subject

Virology,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Epidemiology

Reference24 articles.

1. Leptospirosis.;Levett;Clin Microbiol Rev,2001

2. 2010 ACVIM small animal consensus statement on leptospirosis: diagnosis, epidemiology, treatment, and prevention.;Sykes;J Vet Intern Med,2011

3. Geschiedenis van de meldingsplicht;Van Vliet;Tijdschrift voor Infectieziekten.,2009

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