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. 2018 Jan 30;217(4):641-649.
doi: 10.1093/infdis/jix602.

Cholera Epidemics of the Past Offer New Insights Into an Old Enemy

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Cholera Epidemics of the Past Offer New Insights Into an Old Enemy

Matthew Phelps et al. J Infect Dis. .

Abstract

Background: Although cholera is considered the quintessential long-cycle waterborne disease, studies have emphasized the existence of short-cycle (food, household) transmission. We investigated singular Danish cholera epidemics (in 1853) to elucidate epidemiological parameters and modes of spread.

Methods: Using time series data from cities with different water systems, we estimated the intrinsic transmissibility (R0). Accessing cause-specific mortality data, we studied clinical severity and age-specific impact. From physicians' narratives we established transmission chains and estimated serial intervals.

Results: Epidemics were seeded by travelers from cholera-affected cities; initial transmission chains involving household members and caretakers ensued. Cholera killed 3.4%-8.9% of the populations, with highest mortality among seniors (16%) and lowest in children (2.7%). Transmissibility (R0) was 1.7-2.6 and the serial interval was estimated at 3.7 days (95% confidence interval, 2.9-4.7 days). The case fatality ratio (CFR) was high (54%-68%); using R0 we computed an adjusted CFR of 4%-5%.

Conclusions: Short-cycle transmission was likely critical to early secondary transmission in historic Danish towns. The outbreaks resembled the contemporary Haiti outbreak with respect to transmissibility, age patterns, and CFR, suggesting a role for broader hygiene/sanitation interventions to control contemporary outbreaks.

Keywords: R0; cholera; epidemics; epidemiology; historical; transmission patterns.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Daily cholera case incidence and seasonality of outbreaks in 3 cities.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
The reproductive number (R0) in 3 Danish cities.
Figure 3.
Figure 3.
Cholera morbidity and mortality (A) disaggregated by age for 3 Danish cities and the proportion of all deaths (B) in Copenhagen, 1853, attributed to cholera disaggregated by age.
Figure 4.
Figure 4.
Transmission chains and modes. Solid lines indicate known transmission paths. Dotted lines indicate all possible transmission paths if one single path was not determinable.

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