Publication | Open Access
Increased risk for<i>Campylobacter jejuni</i>and<i>C. coli</i>infection of pet origin in dog owners and evidence for genetic association between strains causing infection in humans and their pets
120
Citations
32
References
2013
Year
Pet OriginMolecular EpidemiologyPathogen DetectionPathologyDog OwnersVeterinary MicrobiologyBacterial PathogensC. ColiGastrointestinal VirusFood MicrobiologyCampylobacter InfectionsInfection ControlDog OwnershipHealth SciencesFoodborne PathogensPathogen CharacterizationVeterinary EpidemiologyRisk FactorsClinical MicrobiologyEpidemiologyPathogenesisVeterinary ScienceMicrobiologyMedicineGenetic Association
We compared Campylobacter jejuni/coli multilocus sequence types (STs) from pets (dogs/cats) and their owners and investigated risk factors for pet-associated human campylobacteriosis using a combined source-attribution and case-control analysis. In total, 132/687 pet stools were Campylobacter-positive, resulting in 499 strains isolated (320 C. upsaliensis/helveticus, 100 C. jejuni, 33 C. hyointestinalis/fetus, 10 C. lari, 4 C. coli, 32 unidentified). There were 737 human and 104 pet C. jejuni/coli strains assigned to 154 and 49 STs, respectively. Dog, particularly puppy, owners were at increased risk of infection with pet-associated STs. In 2/68 cases vs. 0.134/68 expected by chance, a pet and its owner were infected with an identical ST (ST45, ST658). Although common sources of infection and directionality of transmission between pets and humans were unknown, dog ownership significantly increased the risk for pet-associated human C. jejuni/coli infection and isolation of identical strains in humans and their pets occurred significantly more often than expected.
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