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Eurosurveillance
Since 1995, Eurosurveillance has provided the European public health community with an open-access platform to exchange relevant findings on communicable disease surveillance, prevention and control. A weekly, electronic, peer-reviewed publication, Eurosurveillance aims to provide timely facts and guidance for public health professionals and decision-makers in the field of infectious disease to facilitate the implementation of effective prevention and control measures. Impact factor: 7.8. More...
Latest Issue: Volume 30, Issue 45, 13 November 2025 Latest Issue RSS feed
- Rapid communication
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Effectiveness of long-acting monoclonal antibodies against laboratory-confirmed RSV in children aged < 24 months and hospitalised for severe acute respiratory infection, European pilot study, 2024 to 2025
More LessCamelia Savulescu , Iris Ganser , Nathalie Nicolay , Adrien Lajot , Sandra Campos , Iván Martínez-Baz , Ana Paula Rodrigues , Mathil Vandromme , Marta Cara-Rodríguez , Aitziber Echeverría , Vânia Gaio , Marie-Pierre Parsy , Ana Roldan Garrido , Jesús Castilla , Raquel Guiomar , Sabrina Bacci , Angela MC Rose and VEBIS hospital network RSV IE groupWe measured effectiveness of nirsevimab against laboratory-confirmed respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection in a test-negative case-control study among children aged < 24 months hospitalised for severe acute respiratory infection in three European countries. The overall effectiveness in the 2024/25 season among 2,201 children was 79% (95% CI: 58 to 89) and 85%, 78% and 69% at < 30, 30–89 and 90–215 days since immunisation. Immunisation was effective for preventing RSV-related hospitalisation in children, but effectiveness by time since immunisation needs monitoring in future seasons.
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Preliminary report: The most considerable outbreak of Legionnaires' disease in France in the last two decades, Albertville, September 2025
More LessEmmanuelle Vaissière , Audrey Merlet , Muriel Deher , Matthieu Curtil-Dit-Galin , Jean-Marc Yvon , Albane Beaupoil , Emmanuel Forestier , Jean-Marie Kuntzelmann , Brune Joannard , Aymeric Provost , Guillaume Spaccaferri , Christelle Nolibos , Laetitia Beraud , Nathalie Grangeret , Christine Campese , Sophie Jarraud and the Albertville LD Outbreak Team InvestigationIn September 2025, 50 laboratory-confirmed cases of Legionnaires’ disease (LD) were identified in Albertville, in south-eastern France. Initially, 23 patients were only clinically diagnosed and only confirmed later due to limited sensitivity of the urinary antigen screening test used. All cases occurred within 12 days, suggesting a common point source of massive contamination. Despite investigations and the rapid response of LD surveillance partners, the outbreak source has not yet been identified. Vigilance is maintained to detect possible new cases.
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- Outbreaks
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Emergence of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium vanA ST612 with reduced daptomycin susceptibility, Switzerland, 2018 to 2024
More LessWe describe the emergence of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VREfm) vanA ST612 in Switzerland from 2018 to 2024 that resulted in a national outbreak investigation. This clone has predisposing genetic alterations associated with reduced daptomycin susceptibility. The National Nosocomial Outbreak Investigation Center was commissioned to assess the temporospatial distribution of this clone in Switzerland and evaluate its clinical impact. Core genome multi-locus sequence typing (cgMLST) revealed five separate VREfm vanA ST612 clusters of different sizes across different healthcare regions, but predominantly in the German-speaking part. The broad geographic dissemination and temporal variation in detection suggests multiple introductions to the healthcare system. One of these cgMLST clusters (n = 79 cases) with an infection rate of 12.8% was ongoing, mainly affecting patients with extensive contact to the Swiss healthcare system or prior antibiotic exposure. The detection of daptomycin non-susceptibility in patients without prior daptomycin exposure suggests ongoing E. faecium adaptation due to external pressures. Future prevention efforts should emphasise assessing barriers for active surveillance cultures, developing a national standard for cost-effective sequencing methods and promoting the sharing of sequencing results together with epidemiological metadata. Our report intends to raise awareness as this sequence type might already be spreading undetected in European countries.
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- Surveillance
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Antibiotic consumption patterns in acute care hospitals: an integrated analysis using regression modelling combining data from two surveillance systems, Germany, 2022
More LessBACKGROUNDTo enhance antibiotic stewardship and effectively address antimicrobial resistance (AMR), better understanding of subnational antibiotic consumption patterns is essential.
AIMWe aimed to assess antibiotic consumption in Germany using data from 2022 and integrated from two surveillance systems, focusing on regional differences by examining non-university acute care hospitals.
METHODSWe used pharmacy dispensing data from 525 regional or local hospitals and 35 university hospitals, covering 46.5 million patient days (PD), nearly half of all occupied bed days nationwide, to calculate antibiotic use densities (AUD) for systemic antibiotics, expressed as World Health Organization (WHO) ATC/DDD (Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical/Defined Daily Dose) per 100 patient days (DDD/100 PD). The analysis primarily focused on consumption patterns in non-university hospitals, assessing key antibiotic groups through mixed-effects regression. For sensitivity analyses, we employed hospital-adapted daily dose definitions.
RESULTSPooled AUD for participating non-university hospitals was 51.8 DDD/100 PD, with aminopenicillins/beta-lactamase inhibitors being the most prescribed group. Regression analyses, adjusted for hospital size and ward type/admitting specialty, indicated notable regional variation. We identified statistically significant differences in antibiotic consumption, particularly for beta-lactam antibiotics, fluoroquinolones and tetracyclines. For example, several regions exhibited up to 1.4-fold higher use of first- and second-generation cephalosporins compared with the western reference region.
CONCLUSIONThis study highlights substantial regional variation in antibiotic use in German acute care hospitals, underlining the importance of further investigation into influencing factors such as regional guidelines and resistance rates. The methodological approach applied here may serve as a model for other countries interested in analysing regional differences in antibiotic consumption.
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- Research
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Higher valency vaccines’ impact on antimicrobial resistance rates in Streptococcus pneumoniae causing invasive disease: a retrospective analysis based on national reference laboratory data, Belgium, 2018 to 2023
More LessBACKGROUNDFifteen- and 20-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCVs) offer broader protection against invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) than PCV13. Adopting these vaccines may result in decreasing IPD incidence, antibiotic use and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) rates. If the additional serotypes in PCV15 and PCV20 are associated with AMR, AMR rate reduction could be greater than expected from reduced antibiotic consumption alone.
AIMThis retrospective analysis assessed the association between AMR and non-PCV13 serotypes in PCV15 and PCV20.
METHODSLaboratory-based surveillance data on 8,123 IPD isolates were obtained retrospectively from the Belgian Reference Centre for invasive Streptococcus pneumoniae. Isolates (n = 8,088) were serotyped and tested for AMR. Associations between vaccine serotype groups and AMR were evaluated by multinomial logistic regression. Where associations varied with patients’ age, ranges of odds ratios (ORs) are presented.
RESULTSPCV15-non-PCV13 and PCV20-non-PCV13 serotypes accounted for 7.4% (n = 597) and 37% (n = 2,992) of IPD isolates respectively. Of non-PCV20 serotypes, 24% (508/2,125) were penicillin resistant. Compared with non-PCV20 serotypes, PCV15-non-PCV13 serotypes were more often associated with erythromycin (ORs: 3.59–9.43) and tetracycline (OR: 2.00) resistance, and with trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (OR: 0.11) susceptibility. PCV20-non-PCV15 serotypes were more often associated with amoxicillin (OR: 9.45) and cefotaxime (ORs: 5.06–82.38) resistance, and with erythromycin (ORs: 0.13–0.18), tetracycline (OR: 0.71) and penicillin (ORs: 0.05–0.46) susceptibility.
CONCLUSIONPCV20 may lead to a larger decrease in overall IPD incidence than PCV15. Although the PCV20 vaccination impact on AMR may be limited, some resistant or difficult to treat infections could be avoided. Serotype replacement might lead to infections with low level penicillin resistance increasing, but most of these should remain treatable.
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The rise of Candidozyma auris in Czechia: three clades, prosthetic joint infection and fluconazole resistance development, 2022 to 2024
More LessBram Spruijtenburg , Jacques F Meis , Norman van Rhijn , Martina Čurdová , Eva Kašperová , Petr Vašek , Lucie Bartoníčková , Jan Kubele , Petra Olišarová , Kateřina Svobodová , Daniela Lžičařová , Dana Němcová , Věra Kůrková , Šárka Lásiková , Naďa Mallátová , Theun de Groot , Pavlína Lysková and Eelco F J MeijerBACKGROUNDCandidozyma auris has emerged globally as a major threat to public health due to its outbreak causing capacity and antifungal resistance. Outbreaks have proven difficult to control despite enhanced infection prevention measures. Thus, national surveillance is warranted.
AIMWe aim to characterise the epidemiology of C. auris cases in Czechia between 2022 and 2024 to investigate whether autochthonous spread is occurring and asses antifungal resistance.
METHODSHigh-resolution genotyping was performed to assess genetic relatedness between isolates. Microbroth dilution was performed on all isolates and underlying mechanisms resistance were inspected with whole genome sequencing.
RESULTSEight cases from seven different hospitals were reported, mainly collected from non-sterile sites, in addition to the first documented prosthetic joint infection by C. auris. Only two patients reported travel history. Three clades were found, with the first report of Clade IV in Europe. For one patient, initial isolates were pan-susceptible but after short exposure to fluconazole became resistant with a novel mechanism.
CONCLUSIONC. auris reported in Czechia in patients without travel history suggests autochthonous spread. Three clades were present, often with unknown route of introduction. Development of fluconazole resistance upon brief exposure highlights the ability of C. auris to rapidly evolve.
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- Miscellaneous
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Recent articles
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Hepatitis E virus screening in solid organ transplant recipients: prevalence and implications for implementation, Spain, 2021 to 2023
Sara Pereira , Alfredo Pérez-Rivilla , Raquel Carracedo , Pedro López-López , Manuel Rodríguez-Iglesias , Rafael Benito , Ana Fuentes , Miguel Ángel López-Ruz , Carolina Freyre-Carrillo , María Del Valle Odero , Noelia Parajó , Federico García , Antonio Rivero , Antonio Rivero-Juárez and Antonio Aguilera
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