NR AXDZ

AU Barash,J.A.; Dziura,J.

TI A systematic review of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease clusters: do clinical, epidemiologic, and genetic features reflect infectious clustering mechanisms?

QU Connecticut Medicine 2007 Jun-Jul; 71(6): 333-7

PT journal article; review

AB BACKGROUND: While the cause of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) is unknown, case clustering could suggest infectious transmission in some instances. METHODS: Publications of sCJD clusters were systematically identified and pooled to determine if their clinical, epidemiologic, and genetic features reflected potential infectious clustering mechanisms. RESULTS: The search yielded five clusters involving 23 cases. Most notably, among 12 cases with reported residential histories, patients lived for a median of 30.0 years (25th percentile: 26.5 years; 75th percentile: 51.0 years) in their respective cluster regions. Of 19 cases that underwent genotyping for polymorphic codon 129, seventeen were methionine homozygotes (89.5%; 95% CI 67.4-98.3%); none were heterozygous. CONCLUSIONS: Prolonged residency duration and Prnp codon 129 methionine homozygosity may be consistent with underlying disease-clustering mechanisms, although larger, controlled investigations might help to exclude the possibility that these findings reflect the normal distribution of these features among relevant comparison populations.

ZR 13

MH Cluster Analysis; Creutzfeldt-Jakob Syndrome/*epidemiology/genetics/transmission; Genotype; Humans; Residence Characteristics; Risk Factors; Time Factors

AD Department of Medicine, Hospital of St. Raphael, New Haven, USA. jedbarash@hotmail.com

SP englisch

PO USA

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