57 research outputs found

    Estimated incubation period distributions of mpox using cases from two international European festivals and outbreaks in a club in Berlin, May to June 2022

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    Background Since May 2022, an mpox outbreak affecting primarily men who have sex with men (MSM) has occurred in numerous non-endemic countries worldwide. As MSM frequently reported multiple sexual encounters in this outbreak, reliably determining the time of infection is difficult; consequently, estimation of the incubation period is challenging. Aim We aimed to provide valid and precise estimates of the incubation period distribution of mpox by using cases associated with early outbreak settings where infection likely occurred. Methods Colleagues in European countries were invited to provide information on exposure intervals and date of symptom onset for mpox cases who attended a fetish festival in Antwerp, Belgium, a gay pride festival in Gran Canaria, Spain or a particular club in Berlin, Germany, where early mpox outbreaks occurred. Cases of these outbreaks were pooled; doubly censored models using the log-normal, Weibull and Gamma distributions were fitted to estimate the incubation period distribution. Results We included data on 122 laboratory-confirmed cases from 10 European countries. Depending on the distribution used, the median incubation period ranged between 8 and 9 days, with 5th and 95th percentiles ranging from 2 to 3 and from 20 to 23 days, respectively. The shortest interval that included 50% of incubation periods spanned 8 days (4–11 days). Conclusion Current public health management of close contacts should consider that in approximately 5% of cases, the incubation period exceeds the commonly used monitoring period of 21 days

    European Bat Lyssavirus Transmission among Cats, Europe

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    We identified 2 cases of European bat lyssavirus subtype 1 transmission to domestic carnivores (cats) in France. Bat-to-cat transmission is suspected. Low amounts of virus antigen in cat brain made diagnosis difficult

    Epidemiology, management of diagnosis and outcome of infectious encephalitis in France

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    Contexte MalgrĂ© le dĂ©veloppement des connaissances physiopathologiques et la gĂ©nĂ©ralisation des techniques de biologie molĂ©culaire, l'Ă©tiologie des encĂ©phalites reste inconnue dans la majoritĂ© des cas. Leur incidence, le pronostic des patients Ă  moyen et court terme et la persistance et la gravitĂ© des sĂ©quelles sont inconnus. Les objectifs de ce projet Ă©taient d'amĂ©liorer les connaissances sur l'Ă©tiologie des encĂ©phalites en France et dedĂ©crire les patients hospitalisĂ©s en France pour encĂ©phalites en terme cliniques, biologiques, dĂ©mographiques, Ă©pidĂ©miologiques et pronostiques MatĂ©riel et mĂ©thode Les patients de plus de 28 jours rĂ©pondant Ă  la dĂ©finition de cas Ă©taient inclus au cours de l'annĂ©e 2007. Une exploration des Ă©tiologies possibles Ă©tait effectuĂ©e selon une stratĂ©gie prĂ©-dĂ©finie. Des informations Ă©pidĂ©miologiques, cliniques, paracliniques et biologiques Ă©taient recueillies Ă  l'aide de questionnaires standardisĂ©s Ă  l'admission, 5 jours aprĂšs et Ă  la sortie de l'hĂŽpital. Cette Ă©tude Ă©tait rĂ©alisĂ©e selon la rĂšglementation en vigueur. Le devenir Ă  long terme des patients a Ă©tĂ© Ă©valuĂ© au cours de l'annĂ©e 2010 Ă  l'aide de questionnaires standardisĂ©s. Les donnĂ©es recueillies concernaient les symptĂŽmes persistants, la reprise des activitĂ©s de loisirs, la reprise du travail ou de la scolaritĂ© et la qualitĂ© de vie. Le dĂ©clin cognitif Ă©tait Ă©valuĂ© auprĂšs de la famille des patients Ă  l'aide du test QIDECO. La mesure principale de l'issue de l'encĂ©phalite Ă©tait le Glasgow outcome scale (GOS). RĂ©sultats 253 patients atteints d'encĂ©phalites aiguĂ«s ont Ă©tĂ© inclus. Un agent Ă©tiologique a Ă©tĂ© identifiĂ© pour 131 (52%) d'entre eux. Les agents Ă©tiologiques les plus frĂ©quemment identifiĂ©s Ă©taient le virus Herpes simplex (HSV, n=55), le virus Varicella Zoster (VZV, n=20), Mycobacterium tuberculosis (n=20) et Listeria monocytogenes (n=13). Vingt-six patients (10%) sont dĂ©cĂ©dĂ©s durant l'hospitalisation. En 2010, 176 patients ont pu ĂȘtre inclus et Ă©valuĂ©s. L'issue de l'encĂ©phalite Ă©tait favorable pour 61% des patients et dĂ©favorable pour 39%. Parmi les patients qui travaillaient avant l'encĂ©phalite, 24% n'avaient pas repris le travail au moment de l'Ă©valuation. Les patients qui avaient prĂ©sentĂ© une encĂ©phalite herpĂ©tique en 2007, avaient un GOS Ă©taient moins bon que les autres patients. Discussion Notre travail a permis une amĂ©lioration significative de la proportion d'encĂ©phalites pour lesquelles un diagnostic Ă©tiologique est Ă©tabli. Nous avons montrĂ© que les bactĂ©ries occupent une place non nĂ©gligeable dans les causes de ce syndrome, et sont responsables de la majoritĂ© des dĂ©cĂšs survenant durant la phase aigue des encĂ©phalites. A long terme, une proportion importante de patients prĂ©sente des sĂ©quelles significatives ce qui tĂ©moigne de la transformation de l'encĂ©phalite en maladie neurologique et neuropsychologique chronique une fois l'Ă©pisode infectieux aigu rĂ©solu. La frĂ©quence importante des sĂ©quelles d'encĂ©phalite herpĂ©tique relativise le succĂšs obtenu en terme de lĂ©talitĂ© avec la gĂ©nĂ©ralisation de l'aciclovir. Conclusion Notre travail permet de dĂ©finir des recommandations utilisables en routine pour le diagnostic Ă©tiologique des encĂ©phalites, et le suivi Ă  long terme des patients qui devrait ĂȘtre gĂ©nĂ©ralisĂ©. Les encĂ©phalites herpĂ©tiques doivent faire l'objet de recherche physiopathologique pour expliciter lagravitĂ© rĂ©siduelle de la maladie en dĂ©pit d'un traitement spĂ©cifique, et proposer une meilleureprĂ©vention et une meilleure prise en charge des sĂ©quelles.Abstract Background Despite a better knowledge about pathophysiological mechanisms and the generalisation of molecular biological Tools, the aetiology of encephalitis is still undetermined in most cases. Their incidence, the short-term and long-term prognosis of the disease and the persistence of sequelae are unknown. The objectives of this work were to improve the knowledge about the aetiology of encephalitis in France and to describe the patients hospitalized in France with encephalitis according to clinical, biological, demographic, epidemiological and outcome data. Methods Patients aged 28 days or more, who fitted the case definition, were enrolled in 2007. The investigation of aetiological diagnosis was carried out according to a previously defined diagnosis strategy. Epidemiological, clinical and biological data were collected using standardised questionnaires on admission, on day 5 of hospitalisation and on discharge. The study was carried out in accordance with French regulations. The long-term outcome of patients was assessed in 2010. Data collected encompassed persisting symptoms, resuming leisure activities, return to wok or resuming education and quality of life. Cognitive decline was assessed with patients' relatives using IQCODE. The main outcome measure was the Glasgow outcome scale (GOS). Results 253 patients presenting with acute encephalitis were included. A causative agent was identified for 131 (52%) of them. Most frequent causative agents were Herpes simplex virus (HSV, n=55), Varicella Zoster virus (VZV, n=20), Mycobacterium tuberculosis (n=20) and Listeria monocytogenes (n=13). Twenty-six patients (10%), died during hospitalisation. In 2010, 176 patients could be included and assessed. The outcome of encephalitis was favourable for 61% of patients and 39% had a poor outcome. Among patient employed before onset of encephalitis, 24% had not returned to work at the time of evaluation. Patients who presented with herpes encephalitis in 2007 had a lower score on GOS than other patients. Discussion Our study resulted in a important improvement of the proportion of encephalitis with a causative agent identified. We demonstrated that bacteria play a significant role as causes of encephalitis, and are responsible for most death occurring during the acute stage of encephalitis. An important proportion of patients presented long-term sequelae, illustrating the evolution of encephalitis from an acute infectious disease toward a chronic neurological disease. The high frequency of sequelae following herpes encephalitis is a shadow on the success of aciclovir. Conclusion Considering our results, we can propose recommendation for the everyday management of encephalitis patients, both to achieve aetiological diagnosis and a long-term follow-up that should be extended to all encephalitis patients. Herpes encephalitis should be more studied on pathophysiological aspects to explicate the severity of the disease despite the existence of a specific treatment, and to propose better prevention and management of sequelae

    Epidémiologie, optimisation du diagnostic et pronostic des encéphalites infectieuses en France

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    Contexte MalgrĂ© le dĂ©veloppement des connaissances physiopathologiques et la gĂ©nĂ©ralisation des techniques de biologie molĂ©culaire, l'Ă©tiologie des encĂ©phalites reste inconnue dans la majoritĂ© des cas. Leur incidence, le pronostic des patients Ă  moyen et court terme et la persistance et la gravitĂ© des sĂ©quelles sont inconnus. Les objectifs de ce projet Ă©taient d'amĂ©liorer les connaissances sur l'Ă©tiologie des encĂ©phalites en France et dedĂ©crire les patients hospitalisĂ©s en France pour encĂ©phalites en terme cliniques, biologiques, dĂ©mographiques, Ă©pidĂ©miologiques et pronostiques MatĂ©riel et mĂ©thode Les patients de plus de 28 jours rĂ©pondant Ă  la dĂ©finition de cas Ă©taient inclus au cours de l'annĂ©e 2007. Une exploration des Ă©tiologies possibles Ă©tait effectuĂ©e selon une stratĂ©gie prĂ©-dĂ©finie. Des informations Ă©pidĂ©miologiques, cliniques, paracliniques et biologiques Ă©taient recueillies Ă  l'aide de questionnaires standardisĂ©s Ă  l'admission, 5 jours aprĂšs et Ă  la sortie de l'hĂŽpital. Cette Ă©tude Ă©tait rĂ©alisĂ©e selon la rĂšglementation en vigueur. Le devenir Ă  long terme des patients a Ă©tĂ© Ă©valuĂ© au cours de l'annĂ©e 2010 Ă  l'aide de questionnaires standardisĂ©s. Les donnĂ©es recueillies concernaient les symptĂŽmes persistants, la reprise des activitĂ©s de loisirs, la reprise du travail ou de la scolaritĂ© et la qualitĂ© de vie. Le dĂ©clin cognitif Ă©tait Ă©valuĂ© auprĂšs de la famille des patients Ă  l'aide du test QIDECO. La mesure principale de l'issue de l'encĂ©phalite Ă©tait le Glasgow outcome scale (GOS). RĂ©sultats 253 patients atteints d'encĂ©phalites aiguĂ«s ont Ă©tĂ© inclus. Un agent Ă©tiologique a Ă©tĂ© identifiĂ© pour 131 (52%) d'entre eux. Les agents Ă©tiologiques les plus frĂ©quemment identifiĂ©s Ă©taient le virus Herpes simplex (HSV, n=55), le virus Varicella Zoster (VZV, n=20), Mycobacterium tuberculosis (n=20) et Listeria monocytogenes (n=13). Vingt-six patients (10%) sont dĂ©cĂ©dĂ©s durant l'hospitalisation. En 2010, 176 patients ont pu ĂȘtre inclus et Ă©valuĂ©s. L'issue de l'encĂ©phalite Ă©tait favorable pour 61% des patients et dĂ©favorable pour 39%. Parmi les patients qui travaillaient avant l'encĂ©phalite, 24% n'avaient pas repris le travail au moment de l'Ă©valuation. Les patients qui avaient prĂ©sentĂ© une encĂ©phalite herpĂ©tique en 2007, avaient un GOS Ă©taient moins bon que les autres patients. Discussion Notre travail a permis une amĂ©lioration significative de la proportion d'encĂ©phalites pour lesquelles un diagnostic Ă©tiologique est Ă©tabli. Nous avons montrĂ© que les bactĂ©ries occupent une place non nĂ©gligeable dans les causes de ce syndrome, et sont responsables de la majoritĂ© des dĂ©cĂšs survenant durant la phase aigue des encĂ©phalites. A long terme, une proportion importante de patients prĂ©sente des sĂ©quelles significatives ce qui tĂ©moigne de la transformation de l'encĂ©phalite en maladie neurologique et neuropsychologique chronique une fois l'Ă©pisode infectieux aigu rĂ©solu. La frĂ©quence importante des sĂ©quelles d'encĂ©phalite herpĂ©tique relativise le succĂšs obtenu en terme de lĂ©talitĂ© avec la gĂ©nĂ©ralisation de l'aciclovir. Conclusion Notre travail permet de dĂ©finir des recommandations utilisables en routine pour le diagnostic Ă©tiologique des encĂ©phalites, et le suivi Ă  long terme des patients qui devrait ĂȘtre gĂ©nĂ©ralisĂ©. Les encĂ©phalites herpĂ©tiques doivent faire l'objet de recherche physiopathologique pour expliciter lagravitĂ© rĂ©siduelle de la maladie en dĂ©pit d'un traitement spĂ©cifique, et proposer une meilleureprĂ©vention et une meilleure prise en charge des sĂ©quelles.Abstract Background Despite a better knowledge about pathophysiological mechanisms and the generalisation of molecular biological Tools, the aetiology of encephalitis is still undetermined in most cases. Their incidence, the short-term and long-term prognosis of the disease and the persistence of sequelae are unknown. The objectives of this work were to improve the knowledge about the aetiology of encephalitis in France and to describe the patients hospitalized in France with encephalitis according to clinical, biological, demographic, epidemiological and outcome data. Methods Patients aged 28 days or more, who fitted the case definition, were enrolled in 2007. The investigation of aetiological diagnosis was carried out according to a previously defined diagnosis strategy. Epidemiological, clinical and biological data were collected using standardised questionnaires on admission, on day 5 of hospitalisation and on discharge. The study was carried out in accordance with French regulations. The long-term outcome of patients was assessed in 2010. Data collected encompassed persisting symptoms, resuming leisure activities, return to wok or resuming education and quality of life. Cognitive decline was assessed with patients' relatives using IQCODE. The main outcome measure was the Glasgow outcome scale (GOS). Results 253 patients presenting with acute encephalitis were included. A causative agent was identified for 131 (52%) of them. Most frequent causative agents were Herpes simplex virus (HSV, n=55), Varicella Zoster virus (VZV, n=20), Mycobacterium tuberculosis (n=20) and Listeria monocytogenes (n=13). Twenty-six patients (10%), died during hospitalisation. In 2010, 176 patients could be included and assessed. The outcome of encephalitis was favourable for 61% of patients and 39% had a poor outcome. Among patient employed before onset of encephalitis, 24% had not returned to work at the time of evaluation. Patients who presented with herpes encephalitis in 2007 had a lower score on GOS than other patients. Discussion Our study resulted in a important improvement of the proportion of encephalitis with a causative agent identified. We demonstrated that bacteria play a significant role as causes of encephalitis, and are responsible for most death occurring during the acute stage of encephalitis. An important proportion of patients presented long-term sequelae, illustrating the evolution of encephalitis from an acute infectious disease toward a chronic neurological disease. The high frequency of sequelae following herpes encephalitis is a shadow on the success of aciclovir. Conclusion Considering our results, we can propose recommendation for the everyday management of encephalitis patients, both to achieve aetiological diagnosis and a long-term follow-up that should be extended to all encephalitis patients. Herpes encephalitis should be more studied on pathophysiological aspects to explicate the severity of the disease despite the existence of a specific treatment, and to propose better prevention and management of sequelae.SAVOIE-SCD - Bib.Ă©lectronique (730659901) / SudocGRENOBLE1/INP-Bib.Ă©lectronique (384210012) / SudocGRENOBLE2/3-Bib.Ă©lectronique (384219901) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Méningoencéphalite à influenza B

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    International audienceEncephalitis is a rare complication of influenza, mostly reported with influenza A and in children. We report two cases of influenza B meningoencephalitis in adults enrolled in the French encephalitis cohort study (ENCEIF) during the 2015–2016 seasonal influenza outbreak

    Characteristics, management, and outcomes of patients with infectious encephalitis requiring intensive care: A prospective multicentre observational study

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    International audiencePURPOSE: Infectious encephalitis (IE) is a severe disease which requires intensive care unit (ICU) admission in up to 50% of cases. We aimed to describe characteristics, management and outcomes of IE patients who required ICU admission. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Ancillary study focusing on patients with ICU admission within the ENCEIF cohort, a French prospective observational multicentre study. The primary criteria for outcome was the functional status at hospital discharge, categorized using the Glasgow outcome scale (GOS). Logistic regression model was used to identify risk factors for poor outcome, defined as a GOS ≀ 3. RESULTS: We enrolled 198 ICU patients with IE. HSV was the primary cause (n = 72, 36% of all IE, 53% of IE with microbiological documentation). Fifty-two patients (26%) had poor outcome at hospital discharge, including 22 deaths (11%). Immunodeficiency, supratentorial focal signs on admission, lower cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) white cells count (<75/mm3), abnormal brain imaging, and time from symptoms onset to acyclovir start >2 days were independent predictors of poor outcome. CONCLUSION: HSV is the primary cause of IE requiring ICU admission. IE patients admitted in ICU have a poor prognosis with 11% of in-hospital mortality and 15% of severe disabilities in survivors at discharge

    Characteristics, management and outcome of Herpes Simplex and Varicella-Zoster virus encephalitis: a multicenter prospective cohort study

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    International audienceObjective - To characterize differences between Herpes Simplex virus encephalitis and Varicella-Zoster virus encephalitis (HSVE and VZVE) and other aetiologies of infectious encephalitis (IE), and to investigate the impact of time-to-aciclovir (ACV) start, ACV dose and duration on outcome. Methods - We compared 132 HSVE, 65 VZVE and 297 other IE enrolled in a prospective cohort (ENCEIF). We estimated associations between time-to-ACV start, dose or duration and outcome through adjusted odds ratio (aOR) using logistic regression analysis. Results - Prevalence of immunodepression differed among aetiologies: 15/65 (23%) for VZVE, 13/132 (10%) for HSVE and 30/297 (10%) for other IE (p <0.05), as was presence of seizure at admission: 27/132 (20%) for HSVE, 4/65 (6%) for VZVE and 43/297 (14%) for other IE (p <0.05). Poor outcome at hospital discharge (Glasgow outcome scale ≀3) differed among the three groups: 40/127 (31%) for HSVE, 12/65 (18%) for VZVE and 38/290 (13%) for other IE (p <0.05). Time-to-ACV start was associated with outcome in HSVE (aOR 3.61 [1.25-10.40]), but not in VZVE (aOR 0.84 [0.18-3.85]). Increased ACV dose was not associated with outcome among HSVE (aOR 1.25 [0.44-3.64]) nor VZVE (aOR 1.16 [0.24-5.73]). Discussion - HSVE and VZVE are distinct in clinical presentation, outcome and prognostic factors. The impact of early ACV initiation was more apparent for HSVE than for VZVE; however, this could be because of VZVE's smaller sample size and lower outcome rate leading to low statistical power or because of potential distinct IE pathophysiology

    Infectious encephalitis in elderly patients: a prospective multicentre observational study in France 2016-2019

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    International audiencePurpose Data on encephalitis in elderly patients are scarce. We aimed to describe the characteristics, aetiologies, management, and outcome of encephalitis in patients older than 65 years. Methods We performed an ancillary study of ENCEIF, a prospective cohort that enrolled all cases of encephalitis managed in 46 clinical sites in France during years 2016-2019. Cases were categorized in three age groups: (1) 18-64; (2) 65-79; (3) &gt;= 80 years. Results Of the 494 adults with encephalitis enrolled, 258 (52%) were &gt;= 65 years, including 74 (15%) &gt;= 80 years. Patients &gt;= 65 years were more likely to present with coma, impaired consciousness, confusion, aphasia, and rash, but less likely to present with fever, and headache (P &lt; 0.05 for each). Median cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) white cells count was 61/mm(3)[13-220] in 65-79 years, 62 [17-180] in &gt;= 80 years, vs. 114 [34-302] in &lt; 65 years (P = 0.01). The proportion of cases due to Listeria monocytogenes and VZV increased after 65 years (P &lt; 0.001), while the proportion of tick-borne encephalitis and Mycobacterium tuberculosis decreased with age (P &lt; 0.05 for each). In-hospital mortality was 6/234 (3%) in &lt; 65 years, 18/183 (10%) in 65-79 years, and 13/73 (18%) in &gt;= 80 years (P &lt; 0.001). Age &gt;= 80 years, coma on admission, CSF protein &gt;= 0.8 g/L and viral encephalitis were independently predictive of 6 month mortality. Conclusion Elderly patients represent &gt; 50% of adults with encephalitis in France, with higher proportion of L. monocytogenes and VZV encephalitis, increased risk of death, and sequels. The empirical treatment currently recommended, aciclovir and amoxicillin, is appropriate for this age group
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