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Title: | Investigation and response to an outbreak of Neisseria meningitidis serogroup Y ST-1466 urogenital infections, Australia |
Authors: | Lahra, M. M. Latham, N. H. Templeton, D. J. Read, P. Carmody, C. Ryder, N. Ellis, S. E. Madden, E. F. Parasuraman, A. Wells, J. Sheppeard, V. Armstrong, B. H. Holland, J. Pendle, S. Sherry, N. Leong, L. Papanicolas, L. Selvey, C. E. Van Hal, S. J. |
Affiliates: | World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for STI and AMR, Prince of Wales Hospital, New South Wales Health Pathology Microbiology, Randwick, NSW, Australia Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia Health Protection NSW, St Leonards, NSW, Australia New South Wales Ministry of Health, New South Wales Public Health Training Program, St Leonards, NSW, Australia Sexual Health Medicine, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Camperdown, NSW, Australia South Eastern Sydney Local Health District, Randwick, NSW, Australia South Western Sydney Local Health District, Liverpool, NSW, Australia Centre for Population Health NSW Health, St Leonards, NSW, Australia Douglass Hanly Moir Pathology, NSW, Australia Laverty Pathology, NSW, Australia Australian Clinical Laboratories, NSW, Australia Microbiological Diagnostic Unit Public Health Laboratory, Department of Microbiology & Immunology, University of Melbourne at The Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity, Melbourne, VIC, Australia Department of Infectious Diseases & Immunology, Austin Health, Heidelberg, VIC, Australia SA Pathology, Adelaide, SA, Australia New South Wales Health Pathology, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia Central Clinical School, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia |
Issue Date: | 2024 |
Journal: | Communicable diseases intelligence (2018) |
Abstract: | Abstract: In 2023, an increased number of urogenital and anorectal infections with Neisseria meningitis serogroup Y (MenY) were reported in New South Wales (NSW). Whole genome sequencing (WGS) found a common sequence type (ST-1466), with limited sequence diversity. Confirmed outbreak cases were NSW residents with a N. meningitidis isolate matching the cluster sequence type; probable cases were NSW residents with MenY isolated from a urogenital or anorectal site from 1 July 2023 without WGS testing. Of the 41 cases, most were men (n = 27), of whom six reported recent contact with a female sex worker. Five cases were men who have sex with men and two were female sex workers. Laboratory alerts regarding the outbreak were sent to all Australian jurisdictions through the laboratories in the National Neisseria Network. Two additional states identified urogenital MenY ST-1466 infections detected in late 2023. Genomic analysis showed all MenY ST-1466 sequences were interspersed, suggestive of an Australia-wide outbreak. The incidence of these infections remains unknown, due to varied testing and reporting practices both within and across jurisdictions. Isolates causing invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) in Australia are typed, and there has been no MenY ST-1466 IMD recorded in Australia to end of March 2024. Concerns remain regarding the risk of IMD, given the similarity of these sequences with a MenY ST-1466 IMD strain causing a concurrent outbreak in the United States of America. � Commonwealth of Australia CC BY-NC-ND. |
URI: | https://swslhd.intersearch.com.au/swslhdjspui/handle/1/12786 |
ISSN: | 22096051 (ISSN) |
Digital object identifier: | 10.33321/cdi.2024.48.20 |
Appears in Collections: | South Western Sydney Local Health District |
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