Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-jr42d Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-20T13:50:09.148Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Use of gender distribution in routine surveillance data to detect potential transmission of gastrointestinal infections among men who have sex with men in England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 June 2018

P. Mook
Affiliation:
Field Epidemiology Service, Public Health England, London, UK Division of Health Sciences, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK
D. Gardiner
Affiliation:
Field Epidemiology Service, Public Health England, London, UK
S. Kanagarajah
Affiliation:
Field Epidemiology Service, Public Health England, London, UK
M. Kerac
Affiliation:
Field Epidemiology Service, Public Health England, London, UK Department of Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK Department of Epidemiology & Public Health, Leonard Cheshire Disability & Inclusive Development Centre, University College London, London, UK
G. Hughes
Affiliation:
HIV and STI Department, National Infection Service, Public Health England, London, UK
N. Field
Affiliation:
HIV and STI Department, National Infection Service, Public Health England, London, UK Centre for Molecular Epidemiology and Translational Research, Institute for Global Health, University College London, London, UK
N. McCarthy
Affiliation:
Field Epidemiology Service, Public Health England, London, UK Division of Health Sciences, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK National Institute Health Research (NIHR) Health Protection Research Unit in Gastrointestinal Infections, London, UK
C. Rawlings
Affiliation:
Field Epidemiology Service, Public Health England, London, UK
I. Simms
Affiliation:
HIV and STI Department, National Infection Service, Public Health England, London, UK
C. Lane
Affiliation:
Gastrointestinal, Emerging and Zoonotic Infections Department, Public Health England, London, UK
P. D. Crook*
Affiliation:
Field Epidemiology Service, Public Health England, London, UK
*
Author for correspondence: P. D. Crook, E-mail: Paul.crook@phe.gov.uk
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Detecting gastrointestinal (GI) infection transmission among men who have sex with men (MSM) in England is complicated by a lack of routine sexual behavioural data. We investigated whether gender distributions might generate signals for increased transmission of GI pathogens among MSM. We examined the percentage male of laboratory-confirmed patient-episodes for patients with no known travel history for 10 GI infections of public health interest in England between 2003 and 2013, stratified by age and region. An adult male excess was observed for Shigella spp. (annual maximum 71% male); most pronounced for those aged 25–49 years and living in London, Brighton and Manchester. An adult male excess was observed every year for Entamoeba histolytica (range 59.8–76.1% male), Giardia (53.1–57.6%) and Campylobacter (52.1–53.5%) and for a minority of years for hepatitis A (max. 69.8%) and typhoidal salmonella (max. 65.7%). This approach generated a signal for excess male episodes for six GI pathogens, including a characterised outbreak of Shigella among MSM. Stratified analyses by geography and age group were consistent with MSM transmission for Shigella. Optimisation and routine application of this technique by public health authorities elsewhere might help identify potential GI infection outbreaks due to sexual transmission among MSM, for further investigation.

Type
Original Paper
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018 

Introduction

Gastrointestinal (GI) pathogens, including shigella [Reference Morgan1, 2], campylobacter [Reference Gaudreau3, Reference Gaudreau and Michaud4], vero cytotoxin-producing Escherichia coli (VTEC) [Reference Simms5], giardia [Reference Beltrami, Shouse and Blake6, Reference Di Benedetto7], Salmonella enterica serotype Typhi [Reference Reller8], cryptosporidium [Reference Danila9, Reference Hellard10], hepatitis A [Reference Bell1114] and enteric protozoans, including Entamoeba histolytica [Reference Hung, Chang and Ji15], can be spread through sexual contact, most commonly among men who have sex with men (MSM) [Reference Mitchell and Hughes16]. Risk of infection is likely influenced by sexual practices, infectivity and HIV status [Reference Mitchell and Hughes16, Reference Lo, Ji and Hung17].

In England, sexual history is not routinely collected for most cases of laboratory-confirmed GI infections reported to Public Health England (PHE). In the absence of this information, there is the risk that increases or outbreaks among MSM may go undetected. However, increased transmission of GI infections among MSM might produce a detectable signal in the gender distribution among cases reported in routine surveillance data. Gender ratios have been applied previously to demonstrate that HIV infection was transmitted predominantly between heterosexuals in Africa in the 1980s [Reference Quinn18] and as a surrogate marker for MSM activity in Atlanta, USA [Reference Beltrami, Shouse and Blake6].

A rise in Shigella flexneri 3a in England has been described among men without a known history of recent travel from 2009. Follow-up of a sub-set of cases suggested that faecal-oral transmission occurred during sexual contact between MSM, many of whom were HIV positive and reported high numbers of regular and casual partners, chemsex (engaging in sexual activities while under the influence of drugs) and meeting sex partners and locating sex parties through social and sexual networking [Reference Borg19Reference Cresswell21]. The increase in shigellosis has coincided with increasing trends in other sexually transmitted infections among MSM, including lymphogranuloma venereum, which have been associated with similar risk behaviours [Reference Childs22Reference Mohammed24].

We investigated a range of GI pathogens over an 11 year period to explore whether the gender distribution would provide signals of potential sexual transmission, including known outbreaks among MSM.

Methods

Study population

The study population was residents of England aged 0–65 years, with a laboratory-confirmed diagnosis of one of 10 GI pathogens of public health significance reported to PHE with a specimen date between 1 January 2003 and 31 December 2013, known gender and no known history of recent travel. The GI pathogens included were: Campylobacter, Cryptosporidium, E. histolytica, Giardia spp., hepatitis A, norovirus, typhoidal and non-typhoidal salmonellas, Shigella and VTEC.

Data source

Data were extracted from Labbase, the national laboratory reporting system for England until March 2015, which stored data submitted from laboratories throughout England, Wales, Northern Ireland and the Channel Islands. For some pathogens – including Shigella and Salmonella – further typing is performed on a subset of samples submitted to national reference laboratories and these results supplement the Labbase data.

Data analysis

Confirmed laboratory diagnoses for the same pathogen in the same person within a 2-week period (26 weeks for Salmonella) of the earliest specimen were de-duplicated and considered as one case-episode, as per established standards used to de-duplicate Labbase data. This was performed to reduce double-counting individuals with persisting GI infection who have multiple samples taken (e.g. for establishing clearance).

Analyses were restricted to cases resident in England, based on either the postcode of the case, general practice or reporting laboratory, in priority order. Cases were included if the date of their earliest specimen for a given episode was received by the reporting laboratory between 1 January 2003 and 31 December 2013.

Cases with any known recent foreign travel were excluded from the study. Cases were excluded if the laboratory report form noted the case having had any travel to a foreign country or listed a travel destination which was outside of the UK prior to symptom onset.

In the primary analysis for each pathogen, we examined total and annual percentage male and male-to-female ratios for those aged 16–65 years over the study period. We made an assumption that in the absence of transmission among MSM through sexual contact, we would expect 50% of cases to be male, with a 1:1 male-to-female ratio, for each pathogen. Binomial exact confidence intervals were calculated for the percentage male and a positive signal generated if the lower confidence interval was above 50%. We also reviewed data to note where male-to-female ratios rose above two, as an arbitrary cut-off as being suggestive of MSM transmission. χ 2 tests for linear trend were applied to assess change in the gender distribution over the study period at the 5% level for each pathogen.

For pathogens with a signal, secondary analyses were undertaken. Comparative annual analyses were also conducted by age group (<16, 16–24, 25–49, 50–65 years) and areas with relatively high MSM populations in England (London, Brighton and Manchester [Reference van Kampen25]); termed high-risk areas vs. elsewhere in England (termed low-risk areas) to explore whether the percentage male and male-to-female ratio varied with expected differences in the MSM population distribution by age group and region. Further investigation of percentage male and male-to-female ratios were conducted for Shigella species and phage-types.

Results

Over the study period, 529 315 GI infection cases were reported in those aged 16–65 years (Table 1). Of these, 25 192 cases (4.8%) were excluded as they reported a travel history, leaving 504 123 cases aged 16–65 included in the study with no or unknown travel history.

Table 1. Laboratory-confirmed gastrointestinal infection cases aged 16–65 years by recent travel status for pathogens, England, 2003–2013

Italic values indicate that they are subsets of the total Shigella spp. number.

The percentage of cases aged 16–65 years excluded as travel-related (4.8%) ranged by pathogen from 0.1% for norovirus; (n = 18) to 56.9% for typhoidal salmonella (n = 1959) (Table 1). The percentage of cases classified as having an unknown travel history (81%, n = 428 669) ranged from 36.2% (1247) for typhoidal salmonella to 92.2% (n = 3358) for hepatitis A. The number of cases included ranged from 1483 for typhoidal salmonella to 382 641 for Campylobacter.

Over the whole 11-year study period combined, a positive signal (a male percentage with a lower confidence interval higher than 50%) was observed in adults (16–65 years) for six out of the 10 pathogens studied (E. histolytica 68.3% male, hepatitis A 61.1%, typhoidal salmonella 55.4%, giardia 54.8%, Campylobacter 52.8%, Shigella spp. 51.3%) and in three out of four of the Shigella species and phage-types studied (Table 2). The largest number of excess adult male cases was observed for Campylobacter (21 649) and the highest adult male percentage was observed for S. flexneri PT3a cases (89.3%). An excess of females was observed among adults for cryptosporidium, norovirus, non-typhoidal salmonella, VTEC and Shigella sonnei. For three of the six pathogens with a male excess in adults (Shigella spp., Campylobacter and Giardia), there was a corresponding male excess in children, which was not observed for E. histolytica, typhoidal salmonella and hepatitis A. For Shigella spp. as a whole, a positive signal was seen in high-risk areas (62.5% male) but not in low-risk areas (44.8%) or in children (52.1%). For S. flexneri, there was a positive signal for S. flexneri in adults, in both high (73.7% male) and low-risk areas (53.2%), but not in children. For S. sonnei there was a positive signal in high-risk areas (60% male) and in children (52.7%) but not in low-risk areas (41.9%).

Table 2. Excess number of male cases, male-to-female ratio and percentage male by pathogen, risk area and age group, for laboratory-confirmed gastrointestinal infections with no reported travel history, England, 2003–2013

Ratios above a threshold of two or where the percentage male has a lower confidence interval above 50% are shaded.

When reviewing individual years, no positive signals were observed in any of the 11 study years for cryptosporidium, norovirus, non-typhoidal salmonella or VTEC (Table 3, Fig. 1).

Fig. 1. Excess number of male cases and percentage male among cases of laboratory-confirmed gastrointestinal infections in people with no reported travel history aged 16–65 years, England, 2003–2013 (please note different scales for the excess number of males cases).

Table 3. Cases aged 16–65 years diagnosed with certain gastrointestinal infections with no reported travel history, by sex, male-to-female ratio and percentage male, England, 2003–2013 (n = 504 123)

CI, Confidence interval.

a χ 2 test for linear trend.

b Met threshold on rounding up.

Ratios above a threshold of two or where the percentage male has a lower confidence interval above 50% are shaded.

A positive signal for Shigella spp. in adults first occurred in 2011 with a subsequent significant rise (max. 71%, max m:f ratio 2.5), S. flexneri from 2010 onwards (max. 84.1%, max m:f ratio 5.3) and S. sonnei from 2012 (max. 63.5%, max m:f ratio 1.7) (Figs 1 and 2, Tables 3 and 4). A stronger signal in adults was seen for S. flexneri PT2a (max 84.1%, max m:f ratio 5.3) and S. flexneri PT3a (max 100%, max m:f ratio ∞). Annual data by age group and location for Shigella spp. showed male exceedances being higher, earlier and more frequent in those aged 25–49 years than other age groups, and for cases in high-risk areas compared with low-risk areas (Supplementary material S1). No individual year male excess was observed for Shigella spp. in children.

Fig. 2. Excess number of male cases and percentage male among cases of laboratory-confirmed Shigella in people with no reported travel history aged 16–65 years, England, 2003–2013, by species and phage-type (please note different scales for the excess number of males cases).

Table 4. Cases aged 16–65 years diagnosed with Shigella flexneri and Shigella sonnei infections with no reported travel history, by sex, male-to-female ratio and percentage male for selected serotypes, England, 2003–2013

CI, Confidence interval.

a χ 2 test for linear trend.

Ratios above a threshold of two or where the percentage male has a lower confidence interval above 50% are shaded.

For E. histolytica a positive signal in adults was observed in all of the 11 study years for all adults (max. 76.1%, max m:f ratio 3.2), in 10 study years for those aged 25–49 years, in 3 years for those aged 50–65 years, in no years for 16–24 year olds and one for children (Fig. 1, Table 3, Supplementary material S2). A positive signal was observed in nine study years for both high-risk and low-risk areas.

A positive signal in adults was observed for hepatitis A in six out of 11 study years (max. 69.8%, with a significant falling linear trend at the 5% level) with signals were more frequently observed in cases aged 25–49 years (6 years), than those aged 16–24 years (four) and children (one) and from low-risk (seven) compared with high-risk areas (four) (Fig. 1, Table 3, Supplementary material S3).

For typhoidal salmonella a positive signal in adults was observed in three of the 11 study years (max. 65.7% with a significant falling trend) and signals were more frequently seen in cases aged 25–49 years (3 years), than those aged 16–24 years (none), children (one), and in cases from high-risk areas (three) than low-risk areas (one) (Fig. 1, Table 3, Supplementary material S4).

Positive signals were observed in adults for every year of the study period for Campylobacter (maximum 53.5%, max m:f ratio 1.1) (Fig. 1, Table 3). A signal was observed in nearly every year for each age group and every year for low-risk areas and in nine study years in high-risk areas. The percentage male was higher in children than in adults.

For Giardia, a positive signal in adults was observed for each of the 11 study years (max 57.6%, max m:f ratio 1.4) (Fig. 1, Table 3). A signal was more frequently observed for adults aged 25–49 years and children (all years), compared with 16–24 year olds (two years) and 50–65 year olds (one), and in low-risk areas (all years) compared with high-risk areas (ten).

For adults aged 15–65 years a male-to-female ratio of cases above an arbitrary cut off of two was only observed for E. histolytica, hepatitis A and Shigella spp. for England as a whole (Table 3). For hepatitis A and E. histolytica there were no occasions where the male-to-female ratio was above two and where the adult male percentage did not also provide a signal. There was a mixed picture for Shigella. For S. flexneri, the male-to-female ratio rose above two in 2012, later than the first adult male percentage signal (2010) (Table 4). For S. flexneri PT2a and PT3a, the male-to-female ratio rose above two prior to the adult male percentage signal (albeit with small numbers of cases). For S. sonnei, the male-to-female ratio did not rise above two, while the percentage adult male did signal from 2012.

Discussion

We have applied the analysis of male percentage and male-to-female ratios to surveillance data to identify excess GI infections among males. This approach generated positive signals for excess male episodes for a period with a well-characterised increase in Shigella among MSM. Positive signals were also observed for Campylobacter, E. histolytica, giardia, typhoidal salmonella and hepatitis A. No signals were detected for cryptosporidium, norovirus, VTEC or non-typhoidal Salmonella spp. Our analysis suggests that routinely collected national surveillance data can be used to help assess the potential contribution of sexual exposure to the transmission of GI pathogens and to detect emerging outbreaks in MSM. Male excess analysis should be seen as hypothesis generating and any signal detected needs further thorough case-level investigation to confirm sexual transmission among MSM.

When using male excess signals among adults to highlight potential MSM transmission, other factors that may result in a male excess need to be considered, including an excess of males in the population, a reduction in female cases, changes in testing and reporting practice, gender-specific health-seeking behaviour or random variation. Furthermore, other gender disparities in behaviour such as travel, childcare, injecting drug use and food consumption may influence exposure to GI pathogens such that comparison with a 1:1 male-to-female ratio may not be appropriate. However, adult females are more likely to present to primary care than adult males likely resulting in a testing bias that would tend to lower the male-to-female ratio [Reference Briscoe26]. To strengthen the hypothesis that a signal truly represents an increase in MSM sexual transmission, one would expect the signal to be greater in adult males aged 25–49 years compared with other age groups, especially children. A greater signal in high-risk areas may also support the hypothesis for widespread MSM sexual transmission contributing to overall cases.

While we analysed a large national 11-year dataset there were limitations. Recent travel history was poorly reported. The inclusion of cases with undocumented travel history might lead to misclassification of travel-associated infection as domestically acquired. The extent and direction of potential bias are difficult to determine and will vary by a pathogen, as it is dependent on a number of factors, including the proportion of cases reporting travel abroad, the proportion of missing travel information, the likelihood of sexual transmission while abroad and gender differences in travel abroad. International Passenger Survey (IPS) data for 2013 indicates that UK adult males are more likely to travel internationally than females [27] and therefore misclassification may lead to an increase in the observed male percentage. However, misclassification may result in dilution of effect if a high proportion of unknown travel history cases are both likely to be travel related and associated with food- or waterborne infection and such exposure is independent of gender. The numbers presented here likely underestimate the true counts as not all cases in the community present to healthcare or provide specimens (and the proportion who do differ by a pathogen) [Reference Tam28].

Use of the male-to-female ratio as a marker for MSM activity has been applied previously and its usefulness described [Reference Beltrami, Shouse and Blake6, Reference Quinn18]. Retrospective application of our method detected the known increase in S. flexneri PT 2a and 3a and S. sonnei among MSM [Reference Borg19, Reference Simms29], and an outbreak of hepatitis A among MSM in 2004 [Reference O'Sullivan30]. However, other years in which there was a positive signal for hepatitis A coincided with documented outbreaks among people who inject drugs [Reference Sundkvist31, Reference Syed32], who are overrepresented by young adults and men [Reference Hay33], and the Orthodox Jewish Community [Reference Edelstein34]. Overall, then, our refined approach using age and geographical strata has validated the use of male-to-female ratio for highlighting potential MSM transmission.

The age and geographical distributions of excess male signals for Shigella spp. were consistent with the MSM-mediated transmission. Signals were more frequently observed in areas with large MSM populations and high rates of other sexually transmitted infections such as London, Brighton and Manchester, and no signal was seen among children. Application of the excess male percentage method to distinct species and age groups appeared to provide more discriminatory power. A signal was detected one year earlier both for Shigella spp. in adults aged 25–49 years when compared with all adults, and for S. flexneri when compared with Shigella spp. It is possible that more signals for other organisms would have been observed with further discriminatory typing data.

Among other pathogens with positive signals for male excess cases, E. histolytica and hepatitis A showed the strongest indication of likely MSM transmission, with more signals in adults than in children, and for E. histolytica, stronger signals in high-risk compared with low-risk areas. Transmission among MSM has been well described for both these organisms [Reference Bell11Reference Mazick13, Reference Hung, Chang and Ji15]. The episodic positive signal for typhoidal salmonella may reflect the effect of bias arising from incomplete travel information as the majority of cases included in the study with no unknown travel were likely to have travelled (57% of typhoidal salmonella cases identified were excluded due to known travel and only 7% were known not to have travelled).

The consistent slight male excess of Campylobacter and Giardia are of interest. The burden of Campylobacter in England is much greater than other GI infections and therefore we found a very high total excess number of adult males over the study period. Transmission among MSM have been described for both Campylobacter [Reference Gaudreau3, Reference Gaudreau and Michaud4] and giardia [Reference Beltrami, Shouse and Blake6, Reference Di Benedetto7]; however, the finding for both organisms that the excess is consistent in individual years, in both children and adults, and in low as well as high-risk areas may mean that gender factors other than sexual transmission are important in explaining the male excess among adults in this study. Campylobacter infections in England and Wales have previously been reported to be more common in men up until 15 years and thereafter more common in women [Reference Gillespie35], and in a study among English residents of Pakistani origin with Campylobacter infection, a higher proportion were males [36].

We analysed both the percentage male (applying confidence intervals) and the male-to-female ratio. The sensitivity of using an arbitrary male-to-female ratio threshold e.g. two, to trigger action is greatly influenced by the number of cases due to other transmission routes for each pathogen. In our study, the number of Campylobacter cases was much higher than Shigella cases and for a given number of cases due to sexual transmission among MSM, the male-to-female ratio would be higher for Shigella than Campylobacter. In addition, the baseline male-to-female ratio in the absence of sexual transmission appears to differ by a pathogen, e.g. the cryptosporidium male-to-female ratio consistently remained below one. Given these factors, pathogen-specific threshold ratios which trigger action could be refined, modelled on historical data.

In our study, we excluded all known travel-related cases, prioritising identifying domestic sexual transmission. However, MSM may acquire infections due to sexual activity abroad and this method could be refined for each organism to include travel to destinations where it was considered that sexual transmission may be more likely than other transmission routes e.g. via food or water.

Monitoring gender differences can be seen as a supplementary approach to existing measures. Traditional outbreak detection methods e.g. weekly statistical exceedance of total counts compared with expected values determined from recent years, may detect outbreaks due to MSM transmission when subsequent descriptive epidemiology points to an excess of adult males. However, there are a number of reasons why MSM outbreaks may be more likely to go undetected than food-borne outbreaks. The person-to-person nature of MSM transmission (as opposed to point source food-borne outbreaks) may result in a rising tide of cases over many months and therefore may be less to likely trigger weekly exceedances. Furthermore, food-borne outbreaks may be detected due to sick diners recognising a common event and approaching authorities. In contrast, MSM may incorrectly ascribe their illness due to food poisoning and therefore it is less likely that links to sexual transmission events will be reported. A foodborne outbreak may also result in subsequent MSM transmission and so periodic review of gender difference for known prolonged outbreaks may help identify a change in transmission route.

There is growing evidence that transmission of GI pathogens among MSM is becoming a public health concern globally, especially among HIV-positive MSM reporting high risk sexual and drug use behaviours [Reference Mitchell and Hughes16, Reference Lo, Ji and Hung17, Reference Wilmer37Reference Baker39]. In England, outbreaks of S. flexneri have been associated with high rates of hospitalisation and reports of bacteraemia [Reference Gilbart20, Reference Cresswell21]. More recently, there has been an increase in the male-to-female ratio of S. sonnei cases [Reference Simms29], characterised clusters of extended-spectrum beta-lactamase producing S. sonnei [Reference Mook40], VTEC O117:H7 among MSM (including HIV-positive) [Reference Simms5] and an international outbreak of hepatitis A [14]. Simple methods to improve detection of outbreaks of GI pathogens that may lead to severe health outcomes are therefore needed. In the absence of routinely collected information on sexual orientation, routine application of this rapid method, refined to use pathogen-specific male-to-female ratio or percentage male thresholds at the most granular typing discrimination available, might be a useful tool to alert public health authorities to potential GI infection outbreaks associated with sexual contact among MSM and afford earlier health promotion and interventions. We recommend that this approach be used by other countries to detect excess male cases and prompt further investigations to assess whether sexual transmission of GI pathogens among MSM warrants public health action. Surveillance could be further improved by introducing simple questions on recent sexual exposure in routine questionnaires for GI pathogens.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0950268818001681.

Acknowledgements

The research was in part funded by the National Institute for Health Research Health Protection Research Unit (NIHR HPRU) in Gastrointestinal Infections at the University of Liverpool in partnership with Public Health England (PHE), in collaboration with the University of East Anglia, University of Oxford and the Institute of Food Research. The views expressed are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR, the Department of Health or Public Health England.

Financial support

This work was supported by the National Institute for Health Research (HPRU-2013-10038).

Conflict of interest

None.

Footnotes

*

These authors contributed equally to this work.

References

1.Morgan, O et al. (2006) Shigella sonnei outbreak among homosexual men, London. Emerging Infectious Diseases 12, 14581460.Google Scholar
2.Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2005) Shigella flexneri serotype 3 infections among men who have sex with men – Chicago, Illinois, 2003–2004. MMWR morbidity and mortality weekly report. CDC Surveillance Summaries 54, 820822.Google Scholar
3.Gaudreau, C et al. (2013) Campylobacter coli outbreak in men who have sex with men, Quebec, Canada, 2010–2011. Emerging Infectious Diseases 19, 764767.Google Scholar
4.Gaudreau, C and Michaud, S (2003) Cluster of erythromycin-and ciprofloxacin-resistant Campylobacter jejuni subsp. jejuni from 1999 to 2001 in men who have sex with men, Quebec, Canada. Clinical Infectious Diseases 37, 131136.Google Scholar
5.Simms, I et al. (2014) Identification of verocytotoxin-producing Escherichia coli O117:H7 in men who have sex with men, England, November 2013 to August 2014. Eurosurveillance 19(43). pii: 20946.Google Scholar
6.Beltrami, JF, Shouse, RL and Blake, PA (2005) Trends in infectious diseases and the male to female ratio: possible clues to changes in behavior among men who have sex with men. AIDS Education and Prevention 17, 4959.Google Scholar
7.Di Benedetto, MA et al. (2012) Prevalence of sexually transmitted infections and enteric protozoa among homosexual men in western Sicily (south Italy). Journal of Preventive Medicine and Hygiene 53, 181185.Google Scholar
8.Reller, ME et al. (2003) Sexual transmission of typhoid fever: a multistate outbreak among men who have sex with men. Clinical Infectious Diseases 37, 141144.Google Scholar
9.Danila, RN et al. (2014) Two concurrent enteric disease outbreaks among men who have sex with men, Minneapolis-St Paul area. Clinical Infectious Diseases 59, 987989.Google Scholar
10.Hellard, M et al. (2003) Risk factors leading to Cryptosporidium infection in men who have sex with men. Sexually Transmitted Infections 79, 412414.Google Scholar
11.Bell, A et al. (2001) An outbreak of hepatitis A among young men associated with having sex in public venues. Communicable Disease and Public Health 4, 163170.Google Scholar
12.Bordi, L et al. (2012) Monophyletic outbreak of hepatitis A involving HIV-infected men who have sex with men, Rome, Italy 2008–2009. Journal of Clinical Virology 54, 2629.Google Scholar
13.Mazick, A et al. (2005) Hepatitis A outbreak among MSM linked to casual sex and gay saunas in Copenhagen, Denmark. Eurosurveillance 10, 111114.Google Scholar
14.European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC). (2016) Hepatitis A Outbreaks in the EU/EEA Mostly Affecting Men Who Have Sex with Men. Stockholm: ECDC.Google Scholar
15.Hung, CC, Chang, SY and Ji, DD (2012) Entamoeba histolytica infection in men who have sex with men. Lancet Infectious Diseases 12, 729736.Google Scholar
16.Mitchell, H and Hughes, G (2018) Recent epidemiology of sexually transmissible enteric infections in men who have sex with men. Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases 31, 5056.Google Scholar
17.Lo, YC, Ji, DD and Hung, CC (2014) Prevalent and incident HIV diagnoses among Entamoeba histolytica-infected adult males: a changing epidemiology associated with sexual transmission – Taiwan, 2006–2013. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases 8, e3222.Google Scholar
18.Quinn, TC et al. (1986) AIDS in Africa: an epidemiologic paradigm. Science 234, 955963.Google Scholar
19.Borg, ML et al. (2012) Ongoing outbreak of Shigella flexneri serotype 3a in men who have sex with men in England and Wales, data from 2009–2011. Eurosurveillance 17(13). pii: 20137.Google Scholar
20.Gilbart, VL et al. (2015) Sex, drugs and smart phone applications: findings from semistructured interviews with men who have sex with men diagnosed with Shigella flexneri 3a in England and Wales. Sexually Transmitted Infections 91, 598602.Google Scholar
21.Cresswell, FV et al. (2015) Shigella flexneri: a cause of significant morbidity and associated with sexually transmitted infections in men who have sex with men. Sexually Transmitted Diseases 42, 344.Google Scholar
22.Childs, T et al. (2015) Rapid increase in lymphogranuloma venereum in men who have sex with men, United Kingdom, 2003 to September 2015. Eurosurveillance 20, 30076.Google Scholar
23.Hughes, G et al. (2013) Lymphogranuloma venereum diagnoses among men who have sex with men in the U.K.: interpreting a cross-sectional study using an epidemic phase-specific framework. Sexually Transmitted Infections 89, 542547.Google Scholar
24.Mohammed, H et al. (2016) Increase in sexually transmitted infections among men who have sex with men, England, 2014. Emerging Infectious Diseases 22, 8891.Google Scholar
25.van Kampen, S et al. (2017) Producing modelled estimates of the size of the lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) population of England. Public Health England. Available at https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/585349/PHE_Final_report_FINAL_DRAFT_14.12.2016NB230117v2.pdf.Google Scholar
26.Briscoe, ME (1987) Why do people go to the doctor? Sex differences in the correlates of GP consultation. Social Science and Medicine 25, 507513.Google Scholar
27.Office for National Statistics International Passenger Survey Travelpac 2013 database. Available at https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/leisureandtourism/datasets/travelpac. (Accessed 1 February 2018).Google Scholar
28.Tam, CC et al. (2012) Longitudinal study of infectious intestinal disease in the UK (IID2 study): incidence in the community and presenting to general practice. Gut 61, 6977.Google Scholar
29.Simms, I et al. (2015) Intensified shigellosis epidemic associated with sexual transmission in men who have sex with men – Shigella flexneri and S. sonnei in England, 2004 to end of February 2015. Eurosurveillance 20(15). pii: 21097.Google Scholar
30.O'Sullivan, D (2004) Hepatitis A outbreak in men who have sex with men, London, August–September 2004. Eurosurveillance 8(40). pii: 2558.Google Scholar
31.Sundkvist, T et al. (2003) Outbreak of hepatitis A infection among intravenous drug users in Suffolk and suspected risk factors. Communicable Disease and Public Health 6, 101105.Google Scholar
32.Syed, NA et al. (2003) Outbreak of hepatitis A in the injecting drug user and homeless populations in Bristol: control by a targeted vaccination programme and possible parenteral transmission. European Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology 15, 901906.Google Scholar
33.Hay, G et al. (2009) Capture – recapture and anchored prevalence estimation of injecting drug users in England: national and regional estimates. Statistical Methods in Medical Research 18, 323339.Google Scholar
34.Edelstein, M et al. (2010) Hepatitis A outbreak in an Orthodox Jewish community in London, July 2010. Eurosurveillance 15(37). pii: 19662.Google Scholar
35.Gillespie, IA et al. (2008) Demographic determinants for Campylobacter infection in England and Wales: implications for future epidemiological studies. Epidemiology and Infection 136, 17171725.Google Scholar
36.Campylobacter sentinel surveillance scheme collaborators (2003) Ethnicity and Campylobacter infection: a population-based questionnaire survey. Journal of Infection 47, 210216.Google Scholar
37.Wilmer, A et al. (2015) Shigella flexneri serotype 1 infections in men who have sex with men in Vancouver, Canada. HIV Medicine 16, 168175.Google Scholar
38.Chiou, CS et al. (2016) The worldwide spread of ciprofloxacin-resistant Shigella sonnei among HIV-infected men who have sex with men, Taiwan. Clinical Microbiology and Infection 22, 383 e311–e316.Google Scholar
39.Baker, KS et al. (2015) Intercontinental dissemination of azithromycin-resistant shigellosis through sexual transmission: a cross-sectional study. Lancet Infectious Diseases 15, 913921.Google Scholar
40.Mook, P et al. (2016) ESBL-Producing and macrolide-resistant Shigella sonnei infections among men who have sex with men, England, 2015. Emerging Infectious Diseases 22, 19481952.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Laboratory-confirmed gastrointestinal infection cases aged 16–65 years by recent travel status for pathogens, England, 2003–2013

Figure 1

Table 2. Excess number of male cases, male-to-female ratio and percentage male by pathogen, risk area and age group, for laboratory-confirmed gastrointestinal infections with no reported travel history, England, 2003–2013

Figure 2

Fig. 1. Excess number of male cases and percentage male among cases of laboratory-confirmed gastrointestinal infections in people with no reported travel history aged 16–65 years, England, 2003–2013 (please note different scales for the excess number of males cases).

Figure 3

Table 3. Cases aged 16–65 years diagnosed with certain gastrointestinal infections with no reported travel history, by sex, male-to-female ratio and percentage male, England, 2003–2013 (n = 504 123)

Figure 4

Fig. 2. Excess number of male cases and percentage male among cases of laboratory-confirmed Shigella in people with no reported travel history aged 16–65 years, England, 2003–2013, by species and phage-type (please note different scales for the excess number of males cases).

Figure 5

Table 4. Cases aged 16–65 years diagnosed with Shigella flexneri and Shigella sonnei infections with no reported travel history, by sex, male-to-female ratio and percentage male for selected serotypes, England, 2003–2013

Supplementary material: File

Mook et al. supplementary material

Mook et al. supplementary material 1

Download Mook et al. supplementary material(File)
File 77.6 KB