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An epidemic of food-borne listeriosis in western Switzerland: description of 57 cases involving adults.
Clinical Infectious Diseases 1995 January
This article describes 57 cases of listeriosis that occurred in adults in western Switzerland during an outbreak associated with the consumption of a soft cheese. Twenty-one percent of the cases were of bacteremia, 40% were of meningitis, and 39% were of meningoencephalitis. Overall, 42% of the patients had an underlying disease and 54% were > 65 years of age. Patients with bacteremia were significantly older than those with meningitis or meningoencephalitis (median ages, 75, 69, and 55 years, respectively). The epidemic strain, defined by phage typing, was isolated in three-quarters of the listerial cases observed during the epidemic period and did not appear to differ significantly from the nonepidemic strains in terms of virulence. The overall mortality associated with the 57 cases was 32%. Among the patients' characteristics, age and type of clinical presentation were independent predictors of death in a multivariate logistic regression model (pseudo-r2 [coefficient of determination], .26; both P values < .05), and a presentation of meningoencephalitis was associated with an increased death risk (odds ratio, 6.5; 95% confidence interval, 1.1-39.5; P < .05). Neurological sequelae developed in 30% of the survivors of CNS listeriosis.
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