Author:
GILMORE A.,JONES G.,BARKER M.,SOLTANPOOR N.,STUART J. M.
Abstract
In October 1997, an outbreak of meningococcal disease occurred at the University of
Southampton. All six cases were first year students living in halls of residence. Microbiological
characterization of case and carrier strains, case interviews, and a meningococcal carriage
prevalence survey were used to investigate the outbreak. Five cases were due to serogroup C
strains, one case was unconfirmed. Serotyping did not distinguish between the strains but gene
sequencing permitted identification of two distinct strains in the outbreak. Although none of
the cases was known to each other, three had attended the same nightclub one evening 3–4
days before illness. Meningococcal carriage rates in undergraduates were within the range
expected (147/587, 25%), but no carriers of outbreak strains were identified in this sample.
The findings suggest that in communities with a high degree of social interaction, the
introduction of highly virulent meningococcal strains may result in enhanced transmission with
clustering of cases.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
38 articles.
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