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DOI: 10.1289/ehp.8384
¤ OpenAccess: Gold
This work has “Gold” OA status. This means it is published in an Open Access journal that is indexed by the DOAJ.

Case–Control Study of an Acute Aflatoxicosis Outbreak, Kenya, 2004

Eduardo Azziz‐Baumgartner,Kim A. Lindblade,Karen E. Gieseker,Helen Schurz Rogers,Stephanie Kieszak,Henry Njapau,Rosemary L. Schleicher,Leslie F. McCoy,Ambrose Misore,Kevin M. DeCock,Carol Rubin,Laurence Slutsker

Aflatoxin
Medicine
Outbreak
2005
During January-June 2004, an aflatoxicosis outbreak in eastern Kenya resulted in 317 cases and 125 deaths. We conducted a case-control study to identify risk factors for contamination of implicated maize and, for the first time, quantitated biomarkers associated with acute aflatoxicosis.We administered questionnaires regarding maize storage and consumption and obtained maize and blood samples from participants.We recruited 40 case-patients with aflatoxicosis and 80 randomly selected controls to participate in this study.We analyzed maize for total aflatoxins and serum for aflatoxin B1-lysine albumin adducts and hepatitis B surface antigen. We used regression and survival analyses to explore the relationship between aflatoxins, maize consumption, hepatitis B surface antigen, and case status.Homegrown (not commercial) maize kernels from case households had higher concentrations of aflatoxins than did kernels from control households [geometric mean (GM) = 354.53 ppb vs. 44.14 ppb; p = 0.04]. Serum adduct concentrations were associated with time from jaundice to death [adjusted hazard ratio = 1.3; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.04-1.6]. Case patients had positive hepatitis B titers [odds ratio (OR) = 9.8; 95% CI, 1.5-63.1] more often than controls. Case patients stored wet maize (OR = 3.5; 95% CI, 1.2-10.3) inside their homes (OR = 12.0; 95% CI, 1.5-95.7) rather than in granaries more often than did controls.Aflatoxin concentrations in maize, serum aflatoxin B1-lysine adduct concentrations, and positive hepatitis B surface antigen titers were all associated with case status.The novel methods and risk factors described may help health officials prevent future outbreaks of aflatoxicosis.
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    Case–Control Study of an Acute Aflatoxicosis Outbreak, Kenya, 2004” is a paper by Eduardo Azziz‐Baumgartner Kim A. Lindblade Karen E. Gieseker Helen Schurz Rogers Stephanie Kieszak Henry Njapau Rosemary L. Schleicher Leslie F. McCoy Ambrose Misore Kevin M. DeCock Carol Rubin Laurence Slutsker published in 2005. It has an Open Access status of “gold”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.