Kelly A. Jackson
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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Featured researches published by Kelly A. Jackson.
Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2013
Emily J. Cartwright; Kelly A. Jackson; Shacara D. Johnson; Lewis M. Graves; Benjamin J. Silk; Barbara E. Mahon
Outbreak investigations can identify industrial gaps and regulatory measures to protect food.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2013
Jeffrey T. McCollum; Alicia Cronquist; Benjamin J. Silk; Kelly A. Jackson; Katherine A. O'Connor; Shaun Cosgrove; Joe P. Gossack; Susan S. Parachini; Neena S. Jain; Paul Ettestad; Mam Ibraheem; Venessa Cantu; Manjiri Joshi; Tracy Duvernoy; Norman W. Fogg; James R. Gorny; Kathryn M. Mogen; Charlotte Spires; Paul Teitell; Lavin A. Joseph; Cheryl L. Tarr; Maho Imanishi; Karen P. Neil; Robert V. Tauxe; Barbara E. Mahon
BACKGROUND Although new pathogen-vehicle combinations are increasingly being identified in produce-related disease outbreaks, fresh produce is a rarely recognized vehicle for listeriosis. We investigated a nationwide listeriosis outbreak that occurred in the United States during 2011. METHODS We defined an outbreak-related case as a laboratory-confirmed infection with any of five outbreak-related subtypes of Listeria monocytogenes isolated during the period from August 1 through October 31, 2011. Multistate epidemiologic, trace-back, and environmental investigations were conducted, and outbreak-related cases were compared with sporadic cases reported previously to the Listeria Initiative, an enhanced surveillance system that routinely collects detailed information about U.S. cases of listeriosis. RESULTS We identified 147 outbreak-related cases in 28 states. The majority of patients (127 of 147, 86%) were 60 years of age or older. Seven infections among pregnant women and newborns and one related miscarriage were reported. Of 145 patients for whom information about hospitalization was available, 143 (99%) were hospitalized. Thirty-three of the 147 patients (22%) died. Patients with outbreak-related illness were significantly more likely to have eaten cantaloupe than were patients 60 years of age or older with sporadic illness (odds ratio, 8.5; 95% confidence interval, 1.3 to ∞). Cantaloupe and environmental samples collected during the investigation yielded isolates matching all five outbreak-related subtypes, confirming that whole cantaloupe produced by a single Colorado farm was the outbreak source. Unsanitary conditions identified in the processing facility operated by the farm probably resulted in contamination of cantaloupes with L. monocytogenes. CONCLUSIONS Raw produce, including cantaloupe, can serve as a vehicle for listeriosis. This outbreak highlights the importance of preventing produce contamination within farm and processing environments.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2012
Benjamin J. Silk; Kashmira Date; Kelly A. Jackson; Régis Pouillot; Kristin G. Holt; Lewis M. Graves; Kanyin L. Ong; Sharon Hurd; Rebecca Meyer; Ruthanne Marcus; Beletshachew Shiferaw; Dawn M. Norton; Carlota Medus; Shelley M. Zansky; Alicia Cronquist; Olga L. Henao; Timothy F. Jones; Duc J. Vugia; Monica M. Farley; Barbara E. Mahon
BACKGROUND Listeriosis can cause severe disease, especially in fetuses, neonates, older adults, and persons with certain immunocompromising and chronic conditions. We summarize US population-based surveillance data for invasive listeriosis from 2004 through 2009. METHODS We analyzed Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network (FoodNet) data for patients with Listeria monocytogenes isolated from normally sterile sites. We describe the epidemiology of listeriosis, estimate overall and specific incidence rates, and compare pregnancy-associated and nonpregnancy-associated listeriosis by age and ethnicity. RESULTS A total of 762 listeriosis cases were identified during the 6-year reporting period, including 126 pregnancy-associated cases (17%), 234 nonpregnancy-associated cases(31%) in patients aged <65 years, and 400 nonpregnancy-associated cases (53%) in patients aged ≥ 65 years. Eighteen percent of all cases were fatal. Meningitis was diagnosed in 44% of neonates. For 2004-2009, the overall annual incidence of listeriosis varied from 0.25 to 0.32 cases per 100,000 population. Among Hispanic women, the crude incidence of pregnancy-associated listeriosis increased from 5.09 to 12.37 cases per 100,000 for the periods of 2004-2006 and 2007-2009, respectively; among non-Hispanic women, pregnancy-associated listeriosis increased from 1.74 to 2.80 cases per 100,000 for the same periods. Incidence rates of nonpregnancy-associated listeriosis in patients aged ≥ 65 years were 4-5 times greater than overall rates annually. CONCLUSIONS Overall listeriosis incidence did not change significantly from 2004 through 2009. Further targeted prevention is needed, including food safety education and messaging (eg, avoiding Mexican-style cheese during pregnancy). Effective prevention among pregnant women, especially Hispanics, and older adults would substantially affect overall rates.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2016
Brendan R. Jackson; Cheryl L. Tarr; Errol Strain; Kelly A. Jackson; Amanda Conrad; Heather Carleton; Lee S. Katz; Steven Stroika; L. Hannah Gould; Rajal K. Mody; Benjamin J. Silk; Jennifer Beal; Yi Chen; Ruth Timme; Matthew Doyle; Angela Fields; Matthew E. Wise; Glenn Tillman; Stephanie Defibaugh-Chavez; Zuzana Kucerova; Ashley Sabol; Katie Roache; Eija Trees; Mustafa Simmons; Jamie Wasilenko; Kristy Kubota; Hannes Pouseele; William Klimke; John M. Besser; Eric W. Brown
Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) causes severe foodborne illness (listeriosis). Previous molecular subtyping methods, such as pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), were critical in detecting outbreaks that led to food safety improvements and declining incidence, but PFGE provides limited genetic resolution. A multiagency collaboration began performing real-time, whole-genome sequencing (WGS) on all US Lm isolates from patients, food, and the environment in September 2013, posting sequencing data into a public repository. Compared with the year before the project began, WGS, combined with epidemiologic and product trace-back data, detected more listeriosis clusters and solved more outbreaks (2 outbreaks in pre-WGS year, 5 in WGS year 1, and 9 in year 2). Whole-genome multilocus sequence typing and single nucleotide polymorphism analyses provided equivalent phylogenetic relationships relevant to investigations; results were most useful when interpreted in context of epidemiological data. WGS has transformed listeriosis outbreak surveillance and is being implemented for other foodborne pathogens.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2012
Régis Pouillot; Karin Hoelzer; Kelly A. Jackson; Olga L. Henao; Benjamin J. Silk
BACKGROUND Quantitative estimates of the relative risk (RR) of listeriosis among higher-risk populations and a nuanced understanding of the age-specific risks are crucial for risk assessments, targeted interventions, and policy decisions. METHOD The RR of invasive listeriosis was evaluated by age, pregnancy status, and ethnicity using 2004-2009 data from the Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network (FoodNet). Nonparametric logistic regression was used to characterize changes in risk with age and ethnicity. Adjusted RRs and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were evaluated using negative binomial generalized linear models. RESULTS Among non-pregnancy-associated cases, listeriosis incidence rates increased gradually with age (45-59 years: RR, 4.7; 95% CI, 3.3-6.8; >85 years: RR, 53.8; 95% CI, 37.3-78.9; reference: 15-44 years). The RR was significantly higher for Hispanics than for non-Hispanics (RR, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.3-2.5). Among women of reproductive age (15-44 years), pregnant women had a markedly higher listeriosis risk (RR, 114.6; 95% CI, 68.9-205.1) than nonpregnant women. The RR was higher for Hispanic than non-Hispanic women, regardless of pregnancy status, and this increased during the study period (2004-2006: RR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.0-3.3; 2007-2009: RR, 4.8; 95% CI, 3.1-7.1). CONCLUSIONS This study quantifies the increases in risk of listeriosis among older persons, pregnant women, and Hispanics in the United States. Additional research is needed to better describe the independent effects of age on risk while accounting for underlying conditions. These estimates are needed both to optimize risk assessment models and to inform targeted interventions and policy decisions.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2016
Teresa M. Bergholz; Henk C. den Bakker; Lee S. Katz; Benjamin J. Silk; Kelly A. Jackson; Zuzana Kucerova; Lavin A. Joseph; Maryann Turnsek; Lori Gladney; Jessica L. Halpin; Karen Xavier; Joseph Gossack; Todd J. Ward; Michael Frace; Cheryl L. Tarr
ABSTRACT We used whole-genome sequencing to determine evolutionary relationships among 20 outbreak-associated clinical isolates of Listeria monocytogenes serotypes 1/2a and 1/2b. Isolates from 6 of 11 outbreaks fell outside the clonal groups or “epidemic clones” that have been previously associated with outbreaks, suggesting that epidemic potential may be widespread in L. monocytogenes and is not limited to the recognized epidemic clones. Pairwise comparisons between epidemiologically related isolates within clonal complexes showed that genome-level variation differed by 2 orders of magnitude between different comparisons, and the distribution of point mutations (core versus accessory genome) also varied. In addition, genetic divergence between one closely related pair of isolates from a single outbreak was driven primarily by changes in phage regions. The evolutionary analysis showed that the changes could be attributed to horizontal gene transfer; members of the diverse bacterial community found in the production facility could have served as the source of novel genetic material at some point in the production chain. The results raise the question of how to best utilize information contained within the accessory genome in outbreak investigations. The full magnitude and complexity of genetic changes revealed by genome sequencing could not be discerned from traditional subtyping methods, and the results demonstrate the challenges of interpreting genetic variation among isolates recovered from a single outbreak. Epidemiological information remains critical for proper interpretation of nucleotide and structural diversity among isolates recovered during outbreaks and will remain so until we understand more about how various population histories influence genetic variation.
Epidemiology and Infection | 2016
K. Heiman; V. B. Garalde; M. Gronostaj; Kelly A. Jackson; S. Beam; L. Joseph; A. Saupe; E. Ricotta; H. Waechter; A. Wellman; M. Adams-Cameron; G. Ray; A. Fields; Y. Chen; A. Datta; L. Burall; A. Sabol; Z. Kucerova; E. Trees; M. Metz; P. Leblanc; S. Lance; Patricia M. Griffin; Robert V. Tauxe; B. J. Silk
Listeria monocytogenes is a foodborne pathogen that can cause bacteraemia, meningitis, and complications during pregnancy. In July 2012, molecular subtyping identified indistinguishable L. monocytogenes isolates from six patients and two samples of different cut and repackaged cheeses. A multistate outbreak investigation was initiated. Initial analyses identified an association between eating soft cheese and outbreak-related illness (odds ratio 17·3, 95% confidence interval 2·0-825·7) but no common brand. Cheese inventory data from locations where patients bought cheese and an additional location where repackaged cheese yielded the outbreak strain were compared to identify cheeses for microbiological sampling. Intact packages of imported ricotta salata yielded the outbreak strain. Fourteen jurisdictions reported 22 cases from March-October 2012, including four deaths and a fetal loss. Six patients ultimately reported eating ricotta salata; another reported eating cheese likely cut with equipment also used for contaminated ricotta salata, and nine more reported eating other cheeses that might also have been cross-contaminated. An FDA import alert and US and international recalls followed. Epidemiology-directed microbiological testing of suspect cheeses helped identify the outbreak source. Cross-contamination of cheese highlights the importance of using validated disinfectant protocols and routine cleaning and sanitizing after cutting each block or wheel.
Epidemiology and Infection | 2017
K. M. Angelo; A. R. Conrad; A. Saupe; H. Dragoo; N. West; A. Sorenson; A. Barnes; M. Doyle; J. Beal; Kelly A. Jackson; Steven Stroika; C. Tarr; Z. Kucerova; S. Lance; L. H. Gould; M. Wise; B. R. Jackson
Whole apples have not been previously implicated in outbreaks of foodborne bacterial illness. We investigated a nationwide listeriosis outbreak associated with caramel apples. We defined an outbreak-associated case as an infection with one or both of two outbreak strains of Listeria monocytogenes highly related by whole-genome multilocus sequence typing (wgMLST) from 1 October 2014 to 1 February 2015. Single-interviewer open-ended interviews identified the source. Outbreak-associated cases were compared with non-outbreak-associated cases and traceback and environmental investigations were performed. We identified 35 outbreak-associated cases in 12 states; 34 (97%) were hospitalized and seven (20%) died. Outbreak-associated ill persons were more likely to have eaten commercially produced, prepackaged caramel apples (odds ratio 326·7, 95% confidence interval 32·2-3314). Environmental samples from the growers packing facility and distribution-chain whole apples yielded isolates highly related to outbreak isolates by wgMLST. This outbreak highlights the importance of minimizing produce contamination with L. monocytogenes. Investigators should perform single-interviewer open-ended interviews when a food is not readily identified.
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report | 2016
Julie L. Self; Amanda Conrad; Steven Stroika; Alikeh Jackson; Laura Burnworth; Jennifer Beal; Allison Wellman; Kelly A. Jackson; Sally Bidol; Terri Gerhardt; Meghan Hamel; Kristyn Franklin; Christine Kopko; Penelope Kirsch; Matthew E. Wise; Colin Basler
In September 2015, PulseNet, the national molecular subtyping network for foodborne disease surveillance, identified a cluster of Listeria monocytogenes (Listeria) clinical isolates indistinguishable by two-enzyme pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) pattern combination and highly related by whole-genome multilocus sequence typing (wgMLST). A case was defined as isolation of Listeria with the outbreak PFGE pattern and highly related by wgMLST with an isolation date on or after July 5, 2015, the isolate date of the earliest case in this cluster.
Case Reports in Ophthalmology | 2013
Mam Ibraheem; Sushma Vance; Kelly A. Jackson; Paul Ettestad; Chad Smelser; Benjamin Silk
Intraocular listeriosis, a rare manifestation of invasive listeriosis, has a poor visual prognosis. We report an intraocular listeriosis case related to a multistate outbreak associated with contaminated cantaloupe. Increasing awareness of rare listeriosis presentations might facilitate timely diagnosis and treatment, and case reporting can clarify medical and epidemiologic aspects of listeriosis.