Litcius/Paper detail

A meta‐analysis of case‐control studies examining sporadic campylobacteriosis in Australia and New Zealand from 1990 to 2016

Liana Varrone, Kathryn Glass, Russell Stafford, Martyn Kirk, Linda Selvey

2020Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We conducted a meta-analysis of case-control studies to identify locally relevant risk factors for sporadic campylobacteriosis in Australia and New Zealand. METHODS: We searched Medline, Web of Science, ProQuest and Google Scholar using PRISMA guidelines. Reference lists and grey literature were hand-searched. Meta-analyses were conducted in the R package 'metafor' using published odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals. RESULTS: We identified 325 articles, from which we included 10 that described case-control studies. Four risk factors were statistically significant in the meta-analysis: eating undercooked poultry (OR=4.28, 95%CI 3.09-5.93); eating poultry cooked outside the home (OR=2.13, 95%CI 1.66-2.72); having pet chickens (OR=3.29, 95%CI 2.12-5.10); and overseas travel (OR=5.55, 95%CI 3.20-9.63). Among children, having pet dogs showed elevated but not significant risk (OR=1.57, 95%CI 0.99-2.49). CONCLUSIONS: We identified consumption of chicken meat and contact with domestic chickens as important risk factors for campylobacteriosis in Australia and New Zealand. Implications for public health: While consumption of chicken meat is a well-known risk factor for campylobacteriosis, zoonotic transmission is often overlooked. This research indicates a greater need for public health awareness surrounding zoonotic campylobacteriosis, especially for young children.

Topics & Concepts

CampylobacteriosisMeta-analysisCase-control studyEnvironmental healthMedicineGeographyDemographyBiologyInternal medicineCampylobacterGeneticsSociologyBacteriaSalmonella and Campylobacter epidemiologyFood Safety and HygieneFecal contamination and water quality