Epidemiological, microbiological and environmental
investigations indicate frozen berries as the vehicle.
Since 1 January 2013, 1.315 cases of Hepatitis A virus (HAV) infection have
been reported by 11 Member States as potentially linked to the ongoing HAV
outbreak. Of these, 240 were confirmed outbreak cases, sharing the same
sequence KF182323 at the junction VP1-2a of the viral genome. When first
declared, the outbreak was associated with travel to Italy. In addition to
Italy, seven other Member States have now reported cases with no travel
history: France, Germany, Ireland, Norway, the Netherlands, Sweden and the UK.
Epidemiological, microbiological and environmental investigations indicate frozen berries as the vehicle of
infection for this outbreak and suggest that it could be a single outbreak,
linked to a common, continuous source in the EU/EEA.
However other hypotheses cannot be excluded, such as
cross contamination in a food production environment or an outbreak strain that
is already widespread but has, to date, gone undetected. Due to the
characteristics of the pathogen (i.e. low infectivity dose and long incubation
period) and of the food vehicle (i.e. long shelf-life and complex processing
and distribution chain), it is expected that more cases will be reported and
other Member States may become involved. In accordance with their national
guidelines, Member States may consider active or passive immunization of those
in close contact with cases in order to prevent secondary transmission.
Despite
coordinated efforts from EFSA, ECDC, affected Member States and the European
Commission (HAV-Trace Working Group), the ongoing trace-back investigation has
not yet identified a likely source of contamination.
Given the epidemiological and laboratory evidence of contaminated
frozen berries, the risk to human health, and ongoing transmission with
increasing geographical spread, affected Member States could consider
implementing mitigating measures at national level. In particular, Member
States could consider promoting risk communication, recommending heat treatment
of frozen berries before consumption and encouraging HAV vaccination of those
in contact with cases and throughout the larger community. Implementation of an
enhanced sampling scheme for frozen berries at the processing and distribution
level could also be considered. Enhanced epidemiological and microbiological
surveillance for HAV in the EU/EEA should also be encouraged. A whole genome
sequencing approach needs to be considered to examine viral isolates from
different points in time during the outbreak in order to confirm the hypothesis
of a single outbreak. ECDC, EFSA and the European Commission, in cooperation
with the affected Member States, will continue to their efforts to identify the
vehicle and source of infection and closely monitor this event. The risk
assessment will be updated as soon as any new relevant information becomes
available.
Source: EFSA: www.efsa.europa.eu/publications
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