E.coli O26:H11 strains
lacking the stx genes were isolated from bulk milk and curd
samples.
In summer 2013,
an excess of pediatric cases of hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) in a southern
region of Italy prompted the investigation of a community-wide outbreak of
Shiga toxin 2-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) O26:H11 infections.
Case finding was
based on testing patients with HUS or bloody diarrhea for STEC infection by
microbiological and serological methods.
A case–control
study was conducted to identify the source of the outbreak. STEC O26 infection
was identified in 20 children (median age 17 months) with HUS, two of whom
reported severe neurological sequel.
No cases in
adults were detected. Molecular typing showed that two distinct STEC O26:H11
strains were involved.
The case–control
study showed an association between STEC O26 infection and consumption of dairy
products from two local plants, but not with specific ready-to-eat products.
E.coli O26:H11 strains lacking the stx genes were isolated from bulk milk and curd
samples, but their PFGE profiles did not match those of the outbreak isolates.
This outbreak
supports the view that infections with Stx2-producing E. coli O26 in children have a high probability of
progressing to HUS and represent an emerging public health problem in Europe.
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