Rodent-adapted Cryptosporidium infection in humans: Seven new cases and review of the literature

Cases of cryptosporidiosis in humans have been reported with strong indication of transmission from rodents. Here, we report seven new human cases of cryptosporidiosis involving rodent-adapted species (Cryptosporidium ditrichi [n = 1], Cryptosporidium mortiferum [n = 4; previously known as Cryptospo...

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Veröffentlicht in:One health 2024-06, Vol.18, p.100682, Article 100682
Hauptverfasser: Stensvold, Christen Rune, Larsen, Tine Graakjær, Grüttner, Jana, Nielsen, Lene, Engberg, Jørgen, Lebbad, Marianne
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cases of cryptosporidiosis in humans have been reported with strong indication of transmission from rodents. Here, we report seven new human cases of cryptosporidiosis involving rodent-adapted species (Cryptosporidium ditrichi [n = 1], Cryptosporidium mortiferum [n = 4; previously known as Cryptosporidium chipmunk genotype I], Cryptosporidium tyzzeri [n = 1], and Cryptosporidium viatorum [n = 1]) and review cases of human infection caused by these four species published to date. The seven new cases were detected in Denmark within a period of twelve months from 2022 to 2023. Only the C. tyzzeri and C. viatorum cases were associated with travel outside Denmark. The total number of human cases of cryptosporidiosis due to C. ditrichi and C. tyzzeri documented to date globally are still limited (4 and 7, respectively), whereas cases involving C. viatorum and C. mortiferum have been detected to a larger extent (43 and 63 cases, respectively). The four new cases of C. mortiferum were all of the XIVaA20G2T1 subtype, which is the only subtype identified so far in Scandinavia, and which is a subtype not yet found outside of Scandinavia. The new C. viatorum case was identified as the XVaA3g subtype. The C. tyzzeri case was subtyped as IXbA6. No subtype data were produced for C. ditrichi due to lack of a subtype assay. Review of existing data suggests the presence of C. ditrichi and C. mortiferum primarily in northern countries and C. tyzzeri and C. viatorum primarily in warmer climates. While our data may further support the role of Cryptosporidium as a cause of zoonotic disease, case descriptions should be obtained where possible to determine if Cryptosporidium species primarily adapted to rodents are the likely cause of symptoms or just an incidental finding. [Display omitted] •Partial 1-year surveillance found 7 human cases of rodent-adapted Cryptosporidium.•The 7 cases were caused by C. ditrichi, C. mortiferum, C. tyzzeri, and C. viatorum.•The four C. mortiferum cases were all caused by subtype XIVaA20G2T1.•Subtype XIVaA20G2T1 is the only C. mortiferum subtype found in Scandinavia so far.•The C. tyzzeri and C. viatorum infections had been contracted outside Europe.
ISSN:2352-7714
2352-7714
DOI:10.1016/j.onehlt.2024.100682