Abstract
A surveillance system to assess the impact and changing epidemiology
of invasive
meningococcal disease in Europe was set up in 1987. Since about 1991, contributors
from
national reference laboratories, national communicable disease surveillance
centres and
institutes of public health in 35 European countries provided information
on all reported cases
of meningococcal disease in their country. We describe some trends observed
over the period
1993–6. The main findings were: the overall incidence of meningococcal
disease was 1·1 per
100000 population but there was some evidence of a slow increase over time
and with northern
European countries tending to have a higher incidence (Kendall correlation
0·5772, P<0·001),
an increasing predominance of serogroup C, and a shift in the age distribution
towards
teenagers and away from younger children (χ2 test
for trend 44·56, P<0·0001), although
about half of the cases were under 5 years of age. The overall case fatality
rate was 8·3% and
the most common serosubtypes were B[ratio ]15[ratio ]P1.7,16 and C[ratio ]2a[ratio ]P1.2,5.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
116 articles.
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