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European Journal of Epidemiology | 2000

Epidemiological trend of human leptospirosis in Italy between 1994 and 1996

Lorenzo Ciceroni; Erminia Stepan; Antonella Pinto; Paolo Pizzocaro; Giuseppe Dettori; Laura Franzin; Remo Lupidi; Serafino Mansueto; Antonia Manera; Antonino Ioli; Luigi Marcuccio; Rita Grillo; Simonetta Ciarrocchi; Marina Cinco

In the three-year period 1994–1996, 222 reports on human cases of leptospirosis were received by the Italian Ministry of Health. The average annual number of reports was 29.2% lower than in the preceding eight years. In all cases but two the infections were thought to have been acquired in Italy. As in previous years, the majority of cases was observed in the northern regions of the country (83.8%), mostly in males (88.9%). Cases occurred in all age groups, but were more common in the working-age population (15–64 years). There was no common-source outbreaks. The typical leptospiral seasonal course, with a peak in August, was observed. During 1994, leptospirosis was the reported cause of death in 19 patients. Mortality was higher among males than females. The overall fatality rate was 22.6%. During the study period, a total of 126 cases of leptospirosis were confirmed by the National Centre for Leptospirosis or one of the 12 Regional Leptospira Laboratories. Of the 103 patients for whom information on place of residence, contact with animals, occupational and recreational activities was available, 98 (95.1%) were people who live in rural areas or devote themselves to occupational or recreational activities at risk. The likely source of infection and the mode of exposure were known for 55 patients. Forty-five patients (81.8%) were likely infected by contaminating water (43 cases) or soil (2 cases), ten (18.2%) by direct contact with animals or animal urine. Both running (51.2%) and stagnant water (27.9%) have been reported as a source of infection. Rodents were implicated in 50.0% of the 10 cases involving animals. In comparison with the preceding eight-year period, the risk of contracting leptospirosis was found to have increased for recreational activities (from 34.7 to 38.2%) and decreased for occupational activities (from 45.8 to 32.7%). A large number of infections, however, was ascribed to accidental events (25.5%). As in the previous period, besides fever, the involvement of the liver was the most frequent clinical manifestation (70.8%). Influenza-like symptoms were the only signs of illness in 15.1% of cases. Infections by 9 different serogroups were detected. The most frequent antibodies were those against serovars icterohaemorrhagiae, poi, copenhageni and bratislava. The presence of co-agglutinins against serovars belonging to different serogroups prevented the identification of the presumptive infecting serogroup in 19.8% of subjects.


European Journal of Epidemiology | 1994

Survey on the prevalence of leptospira infections in the Italian population

Beniamino Cacciapuoti; Lorenzo Ciceroni; Antonella Pinto; M. Apollini; V. Rondinella; U. Bonomi; E. Benedetti; Marina Cinco; S. Dessì; G. Dettori; Rita Grillo; R. Falomo; Serafino Mansueto; D. Miceli; Luigi Marcuccio; C. Marcuccio; Paolo Pizzocaro; M. L. Schivo; E. Varaldo; Remo Lupidi; Antonino Ioli; A. Marzolini; F. Rosmini

This investigation is the first nationwide survey on the circulation of leptospira infections in human beings in Italy. In nine out of twenty Italian regions, representative samples of the population were investigated for the presence of leptospira infections. Unexpectedly, leptospira infections were found to be widespread, the number of cases being much higher than the diagnosed clinical cases. There were found to be high, medium, and low risk areas. On the whole, the risk for the rural population was no higher than the risk for urban dwellers; leisure activities, contact with animals and residence on the plain versus residence in the hills were important risk factors. There was an unidentified risk factor in urbanites which was absent in the rural population. A changing pattern in infecting serovars was observed, with infections from serogroups Sejroe, Javanica and Australis prevailing over infections from the Icterohaemorrhagiae and Bataviae serogroups, which were the main agents of human leptospirosis during the 1950s. The mechanisms of these changes, the need for epidemiological surveys and improved diagnostic methods of screening are discussed.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2006

Current Knowledge of Rickettsial Diseases in Italy

Lorenzo Ciceroni; Antonella Pinto; Simonetta Ciarrocchi; Alessandra Ciervo

Abstract:  Rickettsial diseases continue to be the cause of serious health problems in Italy. From 1998 to 2002, 4,604 clinical cases were reported, with 33 deaths in the period from 1998 to 2001. Almost all the cases reported in Italy are cases of Mediterranean spotted fever (MSF). Other rickettsioses that have been historically documented are murine typhus and epidemic typhus. Since 1950, only sporadic cases of murine typhus have been reported, and Italy currently appears to be free of epidemic typhus. As in other European countries, imported cases of rickettsialpox, African tick‐bite fever (ATBF), and scrub typhus have been reported. In 2004, three cases of a mild form of rickettsiosis were serologically attributed to Rickettsia helvetica.


Vaccine | 2014

Tetanus in Italy 2001-2010: a continuing threat in older adults.

Antonietta Filia; Antonino Bella; Christina von Hunolstein; Antonella Pinto; Giovanna Alfarone; Silvia Declich; Maria Cristina Rota

Despite being a completely preventable disease, tetanus cases continue to occur in Italy and notification and hospitalization rates have been reported to be higher with respect to European and other industrialized countries. We examined statutory notification, hospitalization, mortality and seroprevalence data to describe tetanus epidemiology in Italy from 2001 to 2010. A total of 594 tetanus cases were notified, with an average annual incidence of 1.0/1,000,000 population. Most cases were unvaccinated or incompletely vaccinated. Eighty percent of cases occurred in subjects aged >64 years and a higher proportion of females with respect to males were reported in this age group. The annual number of hospital admissions was 1.4-1.7 times greater than the number of notifications in the same year. The mean annual number of reported deaths was 21. Seroprevalence data show progressively higher susceptibility levels with increasing age. Over 50% of persons aged 45-64 years and over two thirds of subjects ≥65 years had tetanus antibody levels <0.01 IU/ml. Results show that tetanus is a continuing problem in Italy and, as in other countries, most cases occur in older adults, especially elderly women. The observed differences in notification and hospitalization rates suggest underreporting by physicians. In recent years, Italy has accounted for most cases reported annually in the European Union (EU) but different case definitions are used. In Italy, a confirmed case is one that meets the clinical case definition while the EU case definition classifies confirmed cases as those with laboratory confirmation of disease. The incidence of clinical tetanus in Italy is ten-fold higher than in other industrialized countries, like Australia and Canada, likely due to higher susceptibility levels in Italy. In view of the low prevalence of tetanus antibodies in adults ≥45 years, strategies to improve vaccine uptake in this population group need to be implemented.


European Journal of Epidemiology | 1995

Human leptospirosis in Italy, 1986–1993

Lorenzo Ciceroni; Antonella Pinto; Edda Benedetti; Paolo Pizzocaro; Remo Lupidi; Marina Cinc; Luciano Gelosa; Rita Grillo; Vincenzo Rondinella; Luigi Marcuccio; Serafino Mansueto; Antonino Ioli; Laura Franzin; Franco Giannico; Beniamino Cacciapuoti

In the eight-year period 1986–1993, the Italian National Center for Leptospirosis and the Regional Leptospira Laboratories confirmed 312 cases of clinical leptospirosis by using the microscopic agglutination (MA) assay. The majority of cases was observed in Northern regions of the Country. Cases were reported in all age groups, but were most common in the working-age population. Of 312 cases, 291 (93.3%) occurred among males. The largest number of infections was ascribed to occupational activities (45.8%). The typical leptospiral seasonal course, with a peak during the summer, was observed. Involvement of the liver was the most frequent manifestation. Influenza-like symptoms were the only signs of illness in 11.1% of cases. Anti-leptospira antibodies, cross-reacting with two or more serovars, were found in 28.2% of sera. The most frequent serovar-specific antibodies were those againstpoi, icterohaemorrhagiae, bratislava, copenhageni andsejroe.


Research in Microbiology | 2002

Differentiation of leptospires of the serogroup Pomona by monoclonal antibodies, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and arbitrarily primed polymerase chain reaction

Lorenzo Ciceroni; Simonetta Ciarrocchi; Alessandra Ciervo; Andrea Petrucca; Antonella Pinto; Adriana Calderaro; Isabella Viani; Lucia Galati; Giuseppe Dettori; Carlo Chezzi

All reference strains described as representing separate serovars belonging to the serogroup Pomona and a clinical leptospiral isolate (LP2) from this serogroup were analyzed using a battery of 9 monoclonal antibodies, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and arbitrarily primed polymerase chain reaction (AP-PCR). Monoclonal antibody analysis provided taxonomic results which were in agreement with the current classification of the serogroup Pomona into six serovars and allowed the classification of the isolate LP2 in the serovar pomona. PFGE and AP-PCR, although in general agreement with monoclonal antibody analysis, also were able to demonstrate some differences in the restriction patterns of strains Pomona, Monjakov and CB. These results indicate that these strains, grouped within serovar pomona after the introduction of bacterial restriction endonuclease analysis as the typing method, but formerly described as representing separate serovars (pomona, monjakov and cornelli, respectively), are similar but not identical to one another. This was also the case with strains 5621, the serovar mozdok reference strain, and K1, formerly described as serovar dania reference strain, but currently recognized to be a mozdok-like strain. These findings suggest that the deletion of some serovars within the serogroup Pomona, namely mozdok, cornelli, and dania, should be reconsidered. Thus, PFGE appears to be a useful tool for the serovar identification of leptospires belonging to the serogroup Pomona and for shedding light on the problem of their classification.


Vaccine | 2001

Reactogenicity and immunogenicity of adult versus paediatric diphtheria and tetanus booster dose at 6 years of age

M L Ciofi Degli Atti; Stefania Salmaso; B Cotter; G. Gallo; Giovanna Alfarone; Antonella Pinto; Antonino Bella; C. von Hunolstein

We evaluated the reactogenicity and immunogenicity of a booster dose of diphtheria-tetanus vaccine administered at the age of school-entry, comparing a low-dose vaccine (dT) to the standard paediatric dose (DT). Participants were randomly assigned to receive one of the two vaccines; the study was evaluator-blinded. The frequency of side-reactions was similar when comparing the two groups, except when considering local redness and swelling, which were significantly more frequent among the DT group. The post-booster geometric mean titre of diphtheria antibodies in the DT group was twice as high as that in the dT group (14.1 IU/ml versus 7.7 IU/ml; P<0.001). The higher antibody response and the comparable reactogenicity indicate that DT should be used as booster at school-entry, particularly if additional booster doses during adolescence or adulthood are not administered.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2010

External quality assessment for the determination of diphtheria antitoxin in human serum.

Paolo Di Giovine; Antonella Pinto; Rose-Marie Ölander; Dorothea Sesardic; Paul Stickings; Guy A. M. Berbers; Shona Neal; Androulla Efstratiou; Ruta Paberza; Snieguole Dauksiene; Marina Bujko; Antoaneta Detcheva; Unna Joks; Belkis Levent; Christina von Hunolstein

ABSTRACT Accurate determination of diphtheria toxin antibodies is of value in determining the rates of immunity within broad populations or the immune status of individuals who may be at risk of infection, by assessing responses to vaccination and immunization schedule efficacy. Here we report the results of an external quality assessment (EQA) study for diphtheria serology, performed within the dedicated surveillance network DIPNET. Twelve national laboratories from 11 European countries participated by testing a standard panel of 150 sera using their current routine method: Vero cell neutralization test (NT), double-antigen enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA; DAE), dual double-antigen time-resolved fluorescence immunoassay (dDA-DELFIA), passive hemagglutination assay (PHA), toxin binding inhibition assay (ToBI), and in-house or commercial ELISAs. The objective of the study was not to identify the best assay, as the advantages and drawbacks of methods used were known, but to verify if laboratories using their routine method would have categorized (as negative, equivocal, or positive) a serum sample in the same way. The performance of each laboratory was determined by comparing its results on a quantitative and qualitative basis to NT results from a single reference laboratory, as this test is considered the in vitro “gold standard.” The performance of laboratories using NT was generally very good, while the laboratories’ performance using other in vitro methods was variable. Laboratories using ELISA and PHA performed less well than those using DAE, dDA-DELFIA, or ToBI. EQA is important for both laboratories that use in vitro nonstandardized methods and those that use commercial ELISA kits.


European Journal of Epidemiology | 1988

Recent trends in human leptospirosis in Italy

Lorenzo Ciceroni; Antonella Pinto; B. Cacciapuotii

The recent epidemiological trends of human leptospirosis in Italy were investigated using data collected for the years 1981–1985. A total of 626 hospitalized patients with clinical diagnoses of suspected leptospirosis were reported by hospital centers from several Italian regions. Epidemiological, clinical and seroimmunological data were collected in 517 of these cases and examined by the National Center for Leptospirosis.Serological findings in 33.5% of these subjects met the criteria for confirmation of the disease. In 21.8% of the subjects, low titer antibodies were detected, which possibly reflected previous leptospiral infections. An early antibiotic treatment of the current infection may also have lowered the seroimmunological response in some of these patients.In 59.3% of the confirmed cases, modes of transmission were allotted equally between accidental events and recreational or occupational activities. Drinking water from an open air fountain emerged as an uncommon mode of transmission; it was responsible for an outbreak of 33 cases of leptospirosis. In another 37.07% of the subjects, it was impossible to establish the mode of transmission.Respiratory or influenza-like symptoms were the only clinical signs of illness in 21.2% of the patients with confirmed leptospirosis.In comparison to the sixties and seventies, the prevalence of infecting serovars showed increasing incidence of infections due to serovars of the Javanica (11.0%) and Australis (11.0%) serogroups and an important decrease in the Bataviae serogroup infections (from 58.8% in rice-field workers in the forties to 0.6% in the years 1981–1985). Sejroe serogroup infections accounted for 4.5 per cent of confirmed cases of leptospirosis.In 49.7% of subjects with confirmed leptospirosis, cross-agglutination at the same titre with two or more serovars of different sero-groups occurred, thus preventing the identification of the serogroup of the infecting strain.


Journal of Travel Medicine | 2013

Leptospirosis Acquired by Tourists in Venice, Italy

Filippo Lagi; Giampaolo Corti; Massimo Meli; Antonella Pinto; Alessandro Bartoloni

We present the case of two Australian tourists aged 25 and 26  years who, after immersion in a canal in Venice, developed severe leptospirosis. After a 1-week history of fever, headache, myalgia, and vomiting they developed jaundice and renal failure. Complete remission was achieved by antibiotic therapy and hemodialysis.

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Lorenzo Ciceroni

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Simonetta Ciarrocchi

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Alessandra Ciervo

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Dorothea Sesardic

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

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Paul Stickings

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

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Antonino Bella

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Beniamino Cacciapuoti

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Giovanna Alfarone

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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