Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-5g6vh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T07:58:53.589Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Risk factors for acute toxoplasmosis in England and Wales

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 September 2016

B. SAID
Affiliation:
Emerging Infections and Zoonoses Section, National Infections Service, Public Health England, UK
K. D. HALSBY*
Affiliation:
Emerging Infections and Zoonoses Section, National Infections Service, Public Health England, UK
C. M. O'CONNOR
Affiliation:
Emerging Infections and Zoonoses Section, National Infections Service, Public Health England, UK
J. FRANCIS
Affiliation:
Toxoplasma Reference Unit, Public Health Wales, UK
K. HEWITT
Affiliation:
London Deanery, UK
N. Q. VERLANDER
Affiliation:
Statistics, Modelling and Economics Department, National Infections Service, Public Health England, UK
E. GUY
Affiliation:
Toxoplasma Reference Unit, Public Health Wales, UK
D. MORGAN
Affiliation:
Emerging Infections and Zoonoses Section, National Infections Service, Public Health England, UK
*
*Author for correspondence: Dr K. D. Halsby, Emerging and Zoonotic Infections Section, National Infections Service, Public Health England, NW9 5EQ, UK. (Email: kate.halsby@phe.gov.uk)
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Summary

Over 300 cases of acute toxoplasmosis are confirmed by reference testing in England and Wales annually. We conducted a case-control study to identify risk factors for Toxoplasma gondii infection to inform prevention strategies. Twenty-eight cases and 27 seronegative controls participated. We compared their food history and environmental exposures using logistic regression to calculate odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals in a model controlling for age and sex. Univariable analysis showed that the odds of eating beef (OR 10·7, P < 0·001), poultry (OR 6·4, P = 0·01) or lamb/mutton (OR 4·9, P = 0·01) was higher for cases than controls. After adjustment for potential confounders a strong association between beef and infection remained (OR 5·6, P = 0·01). The small sample size was a significant limitation and larger studies are needed to fully investigate potential risk factors. The study findings emphasize the need to ensure food is thoroughly cooked and handled hygienically, especially for those in vulnerable groups.

Type
Original Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016 

INTRODUCTION

Toxoplasmosis is a zoonotic disease caused by the protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii, which usually causes a mild illness in humans. However, toxoplasmosis can have severe implications for pregnant women or immunocompromised people. About 80% of acute Toxoplasma infections in immunocompetent hosts are asymptomatic [1]. When symptomatic infection occurs in immunocompetent individuals, common manifestations include lymphadenopathy and/or influenza-like illness. Chorioretinitis can also occur, although more rarely [Reference McCabe2]. Some epidemiological studies suggest a relationship between toxoplasmosis and the development of psychiatric disorders including schizophrenia [Reference Torrey and Yolken3]. In the immunocompromised, complications can include ocular or cerebral infection. In pregnant women, toxoplasmosis can result in miscarriage, stillbirth, or congenital toxoplasmosis in the baby, causing a range of potential long-term conditions.

Toxoplasma gondii can be found in the faeces of infected cats, in environments contaminated by infected cat faeces, and in the meat of infected animals such as pigs, cattle and sheep. In cats, the parasite infects and reproduces in the gut epithelial cells and oocysts are then excreted in faeces. In non-felines, including humans, ingestion of Toxoplasma oocysts can result in the organisms being disseminated throughout the body in the tachyzoite form during a parasitaemic phase. These tachyzoites can form intracellular tissue cysts within which they may remain in their bradyzoite form for the life of the host. These tissue cysts are infectious if consumed by other animals including humans [Reference Tenter, Heckerroth and Weiss4].

Toxoplasmosis can be acquired in humans by: (i) ingesting sporulated oocysts from the environment, usually from soil, fruit or vegetables, or from water contaminated with feline faeces; (ii) ingesting cysts in food produced from an infected animal; (iii) vertical transmission from an infected mother to her fetus; (iv) blood transfusion or organ transplantation; and (v) ingesting the parasite following direct contact with products of conception during lambing [1, Reference Tenter, Heckerroth and Weiss48]. The relative role of consumption of cysts in undercooked meat products and intake of oocysts from soil or water contaminated by cat faeces is not known [9].

Toxoplasmosis is not a notifiable disease or organism in England and Wales. The current enhanced surveillance programme relies on identification of cases referred for specialist testing at the Public Health Wales Toxoplasma Reference Unit (TRU), where 300–450 cases are reported each year [10]. However, seroprevalence studies suggest that toxoplasmosis is significantly underreported [9].

Currently there are no national guidelines for the prevention of toxoplasmosis in England and Wales. Until fairly recently, infection with T. gondii was presumed to be primarily related to cat contact. A number of European studies in the 1990s (as detailed in the Discussion) identified associations with meat consumption in continental Europe, but uncertainty has remained as to whether British eating habits are sufficiently different to result in differences in the primary modes of transmission in the UK. The Advisory Committee on the Microbiological Safety of Food has acknowledged that the relative contribution of food as a route of transmission of Toxoplasma infection in the UK is not known, and has recommended that a case-control study be conducted to investigate the importance of food and environmental risk factors [9]. The European Food Safety Authority has also concluded that the relative roles of the potential routes of infection are unknown [1]. In order to maximize the effectiveness of any intervention strategy, a clear understanding is required of the relative importance and frequency of each of these modes of transmission.

This study therefore aims to investigate the potential risk factors in the UK in order to better inform possible prevention strategies. The study also aims to assess the feasibility of conducting a larger study using this methodology.

METHODS

Data on clinical cases of Toxoplasma infection in England and Wales are collected through an enhanced surveillance system delivered by Public Health England (PHE) and TRU. Laboratories refer samples to TRU for specialist diagnosis or reference testing when routine laboratory testing is not sufficient to achieve a definitive diagnosis or to fully inform clinical management. A substantial proportion of such samples come from vulnerable clinical groups.

TRU has developed a series of laboratory investigation pathways for the various clinical scenarios where specialist testing is required. Laboratory tests undertaken include the ‘gold standard’ Sabin–Feldman dye test, enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for the detection of specific IgG and IgM antibodies, immunosorbent agglutination assay for IgA or IgM, IgG avidity measurement, immunoblotting, histological examination of solid tissues, and nucleic acid amplification testing (real-time PCR). An acute case of Toxoplasma infection in an immunocompetent individual is defined, for the purposes of this study, as a patient presenting with (i) dye test ⩾500 IU/ml, and (ii) IgM levels ⩾60 U/ml as measured by the TRU IgM EIA.

All adults confirmed as an acute case of Toxoplasma infection by TRU between December 2012 and December 2013 were contacted by post and invited to participate in the study. The laboratories that referred positive cases to TRU were asked to supply a list of individuals who had tested negative for T. gondii. These individuals were then contacted by post and invited to participate as controls. If no response was received, a second and final invitation letter was sent.

Each person who agreed to take part in the study was contacted by telephone and interviewed using a structured questionnaire. At least three attempts at telephone contact were made. Pregnant individuals were excluded because they might be following pregnancy-associated dietary recommendations, and on ethical grounds due to potential distress. Additionally, individuals who had travelled abroad in the month before onset of symptoms (or the date of interview for controls) were excluded since the study aimed to examine the risk of infection in the UK only. The questionnaire gathered demographic and clinical information, and details of the foods that they were likely to have eaten in the month before onset of symptoms (cases) or interview (controls). Sections on different food groups (e.g. beef, pork, lamb) included questions on how it would have been prepared. Participants were asked about other potential exposures such as contact with cats, type of housing and leisure activities. For each case, we attempted to recruit two controls matched by reporting laboratory, and assuming a response rate of 25% this meant that we had a required sample size of 225.

Data were stored in a secure password-protected database, and were cleaned and analysed using Stata/SE v. 13·1 (StataCorp, USA). Logistic regression was used to calculate odds ratios (ORs) to examine associations between potential risk factors and cases of Toxoplasma in a univariable analysis. We developed a multivariable logistic regression model to obtain adjusted ORs and their 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Exposures which were identified as potential risk factors in a univariable analysis (OR > 1 and P ⩽ 0·2) and to which >30% of cases were exposed, were included in the model and adjusted ORs and their 95% CIs calculated. Age and sex were included in the model, with linearity of age with outcome on the logit scale tested. Any food item with a statistically significant association with case status in the multivariable model was explored further by replacing it in the model with a variable indicating how thoroughly the food had been cooked. P values were calculated using the likelihood ratio test and statistical significance was set at 5%. In those instances where an OR could not be estimated due to sampling zeros, exact logistic regression was used to obtain a median unbiased estimate of the OR.

Ethical approval for this study was granted by the National Information Governance Board for Health and Social Care.

RESULTS

Of 438 referrals received at TRU from laboratories between December 2012 and December 2013, 55 participants (28 cases and 27 controls) completed questionnaires for the study (response rate 12·6%; Fig. 1). The response rate was low and it was not possible to match participants by laboratory, a limitation highlighted further in the Discussion.

Fig. 1. Case and control exclusions and losses.

Thirty-five (63·6%) participants were female and 52 (94·5%) gave their ethnicity as ‘white’, with no difference between cases and controls. Controls were slightly older than cases (median age of controls 46 years, median age of cases 37·5 years).

A third of controls (33·3%) were immunocompromised compared to 17·9% of cases. When the country was divided into Government Office Regions [11], there was at least one case and control reported from each region, with the majority from the South of England (12 cases, 15 controls).

Data completion was very high, as might be expected from telephone interviews. Three exposure variables had one answer missing each (all from different individuals), and the ‘preparation of beef’ variable had eight missing values.

In the univariable analysis, cases had a higher odds of having eaten beef (OR 10·7, 95% CI 1·49–∞, P = 0·001), lamb/mutton (OR 1·3, 95% CI 1·29–18·8, P = 0·01) or poultry (OR 6·3, 95% CI 0·74–∞, P = 0·01) (Table 1). None of the other food exposures or environmental risk factors, such as contact with cats or cat ownership, showed an association at the 5% significance level.

Table 1. Univariable analysis, after adjusting for age and sex (in all analyses, a linear association on the logit scale of age with outcome was found to be adequate)

OR, Odds ratio; CI, confidence interval.

* Median unbiased estimate.

The variables entered into the multivariable model (with >30% of cases exposed and where OR > 1 and P ⩽ 0·2) were: beef, pork, lamb/mutton, poultry, dairy, and gardening. Eating BBQ and hunting both had P values <0·2, but <30% of cases were exposed. After adjustment for the other variables of interest, only beef remained associated with infection (OR 5·6, 95% CI 0·63–∞, P = 0·01) (Table 2). All CIs for this model crossed 1.

Table 2. Multivariable model results, after adjusting for age and sex

OR, Odds ratio; CI, confidence interval.

* Median unbiased estimate.

The associations were further explored by replacing the food item ‘beef’ in the model with a variable indicating how thoroughly the food had been cooked (‘preparation type’). There was a significant improvement in model fit compared to a model without any beef variable (P < 0·0007). The largest OR was returned for the category ‘raw to medium rare’ (OR 5·8) compared to ‘well done’ beef (Table 3).

Table 3. ‘Preparation of beef’ substituted for ‘beef’ in multivariable model (whose results are given in Table 2)

OR, Odds ratio; CI, confidence interval.

* Median unbiased estimate.

DISCUSSION

Risk factors for toxoplasmosis in England and Wales are poorly described. This study suggests an association between consumption of beef and toxoplasmosis, especially when the beef is cooked rare or medium rare.

These findings are consistent with other European studies that found evidence of an association between raw or undercooked meat and Toxoplasma infection in humans. While the overall finding is relatively consistent between studies, the types of meat posing the greatest risk are variable. Cook et al. conducted a European multi-centre study in pregnant women where the risk factors most strongly predictive of acute infection were eating undercooked lamb, beef or game, contact with soil, and travel outside Europe and the United States and Canada [Reference Cook12]. Buffolano et al. found an association between recent infection in pregnant women in Italy and consumption of cured pork and raw meat (of unspecified type) [Reference Buffolano13]. Kapperud et al. discovered associations between increased risk of maternal infection and a large number of factors including (among others) undercooked minced meat products, undercooked mutton, undercooked pork and cleaning cat litter boxes [Reference Kapperud5]. Baril et al. investigated Toxoplasma infection in pregnant women in France and found that consumption of undercooked beef, consumption of raw vegetables outside the home, and having a pet cat were significantly associated with Toxoplasma infection [Reference Baril14].

While these European studies have suggested for some time that meat is an important source of T. gondii infection, food preferences and dietary habits in the UK have been considered sufficiently distinct, that the relative importance of potential risk factors may be different. Our study has demonstrated that this is not the case, and suggests that undercooked meat is an important risk in England and Wales, as it is across the rest of Europe.

There has been one previous study examining the risk factors for T. gondii infection in the UK. Nash et al. examined a cohort of pregnant women who were tested for Toxoplasma antibodies, and found evidence that feeding a dog raw meat, living on a farm or in the countryside as a child, living in mainland Europe (excluding the UK) as a child, and those aged ⩾35 years were all significantly associated with seropositivity [Reference Nash15]. However, they found no evidence of significant dietary risk factors in this group and these authors suggested that this may be due to the limitations of the serological tests used to determine infection status, i.e. detection of IgG alone and in the absence of IgM detection could not discriminate between recent infection and infection acquired years or decades previously. Given that dietary habits may change significantly over such a potentially long period, the correlation between current risk factors and factors that applied at the time the infection was acquired may have been poor.

Care must be taken with the conclusions drawn from the data because the CIs for the adjusted OR in the multivariable regression models were very wide and crossed 1. This is a significant limitation of the study and is likely to have been due to low power resulting from a small study size. This study used a combination of established methods of recruitment where potential participants were contacted first by post and, following their written agreement, subsequently by telephone [Reference Said16, Reference Said17]. However, in our study the uptake was poor and became a serious limiting factor. The study aimed to recruit two controls per case, matched on reporting laboratory. However, controls matched by laboratory proved to be unfeasible and even when the protocol was modified to remove this restriction, we were still unable to recruit one control per case. Requiring the controls to have tested negative for Toxoplasma was onerous; however, seropositivity for T. gondii infection is high in England and Wales, and it was important that controls had not had a Toxoplasma infection prior to participation in the study. While there was a higher response rate in cases than controls (18·7% vs. 9·4%), most potential participants failed to respond at all. This may reflect changing attitudes to telephone surveys, and alternative methods of participation (e.g. internet survey, postal survey) should be considered for future studies.

The study methodology is based on food likely to have been consumed by the participant in the month before questionnaire for controls and the month before onset of symptoms for cases. While this may lead to a risk of recall bias, the study relied on food preferences, which remain consistent over time, rather than consumption, so that any recall bias was reduced.

T. gondii has been identified as the foodborne pathogen associated with the second highest public health impact both in the USA and The Netherlands [Reference Scallan18, Reference Mangen19]. Currently, in the UK there are no agreed national guidelines for prevention of toxoplasmosis. Both the life-cycle of the parasite and the modes of transmission provide opportunities for intervention and prevention. A clearer and more precise understanding of the relative importance of these will greatly inform the optimization of future guidelines for the UK population.

CONCLUSIONS

The results of the current study suggest an association between beef and toxoplasmosis, especially when the beef is cooked rare or medium rare. The association between undercooked beef and toxoplasmosis could be used as the basis for guidelines for the prevention of toxoplasmosis, especially in vulnerable groups such as pregnant women and the immunocompromised. This would be consistent with current recommendations that pregnant women ensure food is thoroughly cooked. Careful handling of raw and partially cooked meats is also advisable. The authors recommend that this work should be extended to a larger prospective study that minimizes recall bias and that future methodologies seek ways to maximize rates of recruitment.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The authors acknowledge the work of L. Pedrozzi, M.-A. Dugail, and H. Kirkbride in helping to develop the study protocols and obtaining ethics approval, B. Ben-Ismaeil for his assistance in conducting interviews, and J. McCormick for her help with data entry. We also like thank all of the collaborating laboratories and NHS trusts who gave permissions and provided data for the study.

DECLARATION OF INTEREST

None.

References

REFERENCES

1. EFSA. Surveillance and monitoring of Toxoplasma in humans, food and animals (http://www.efsa.europa.eu/sites/default/files/scientific_output/files/main_documents/biohaz_op_ej583_toxoplasma_en%2C3.pdf). EFSA Journal 2007; 583: 164.Google Scholar
2. McCabe, R, et al. Clinical spectrum in 107 cases of toxoplasmic lymphadenopathy. Review of Infectious Diseases 1987; 9: 754774.Google Scholar
3. Torrey, E, Yolken, R. Schizophrenia and toxoplasmosis. Schizophrenia Bulletin 2007; 33: 727728.Google Scholar
4. Tenter, A, Heckerroth, A, Weiss, L. Toxoplasma gondii: from animals to humans. International Journal of Parasitology 2000; 30: 12171258.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
5. Kapperud, G, et al. Risk factors for Toxoplasma gondii infection in pregnancy. Results of a prospective case-control study in Norway. American Journal of Epidemiology 1996; 144: 405412.Google Scholar
6. Tenter, A. Toxoplasma gondii in animals used for human consumption. Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz 2009; 104: 364369.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
7. Bowie, W, et al. Outbreak of toxoplasmosis associated with municipal drinking water. The BC Tocoplasma Investigation Team. Lancet 1997; 350: 173177.Google Scholar
8. PHE. Toxoplasmosis: diagnosis, epidemiology and prevention. (https://www.gov.uk/guidance/toxoplasmosis).Google Scholar
9. ACMSF. Risk profile in relation to toxoplasma in the food chain, 2012.Google Scholar
10. Defra, PHE. United Kingdom Zoonoses Report (https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/zoonoses-reports).Google Scholar
12. Cook, A, et al. Sources of toxoplasma infection in pregnant women: European multicentre case-control study. European Research Network on Congenital Toxoplasmosis. British Medical Journal 2000; 321: 142147.Google Scholar
13. Buffolano, W, et al. Risk factors for recent toxoplasma infection in pregnant women in Naples. Epidemiology & Infection 1996; 116: 347351.Google Scholar
14. Baril, L, et al. Risk factors for Toxoplasma infection in pregnancy: a case-control study in France. Scandinavin Journal of Infectious Diseases 1999; 31: 305309.Google Scholar
15. Nash, J, et al. Risk factors for toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in Kent, United Kingdom. Epidemiology & Infection 2005; 133: 475483.Google Scholar
16. Said, B, et al. Hepatitis E outbreak on cruise ship. Emerging Infectious Diseases 2009; 15: 17381744.Google Scholar
17. Said, B, et al. Hepatitis E virus in England and Wales: indigenous infection is associated with the consumption of processed pork products. Epidemiology & Infection 2014; 142: 14671475.Google Scholar
18. Scallan, E, et al. An assessment of the human health impact of seven leading foodborne pathogensin the United States using disability adjusted life years. Epidemiology & Infection 2015; 143: 27952804.Google Scholar
19. Mangen, M, et al. Cost-of-illness and disease burden of food-related pathogens in the Netherlands, 2011. International Journal of Food Microbiology 2015; 196: 8493.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Case and control exclusions and losses.

Figure 1

Table 1. Univariable analysis, after adjusting for age and sex (in all analyses, a linear association on the logit scale of age with outcome was found to be adequate)

Figure 2

Table 2. Multivariable model results, after adjusting for age and sex

Figure 3

Table 3. ‘Preparation of beef’ substituted for ‘beef’ in multivariable model (whose results are given in Table 2)