Commission Implementing Decision (EU) 2018/945

of 22 June 2018

on the communicable diseases and related special health issues to be covered by epidemiological surveillance as well as relevant case definitions

(Text with EEA relevance)

THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION,

Having regard to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,

Having regard to Decision No 1082/2013/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 22 October 2013 on serious cross-border threats to health and repealing Decision No 2119/98/EC(1), and in particular Article 6(5)(a) and (b) thereof,

Whereas:

(1) Pursuant to Decision No 2119/98/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council(2), Commission Decision 2000/96/EC(3) established a list of communicable diseases and special health issues to be covered by epidemiological surveillance in the Community network.

(2) Commission Decision 2002/253/EC(4) laid down case definitions for reporting communicable diseases listed in Decision 2000/96/EC to the Community network.

(3) The Annex to Decision No 1082/2013/EU sets out the criteria for selecting the communicable diseases and related special health issues to be covered by epidemiological surveillance within the network.

(4) The list of diseases and related special health issues established by Decision 2000/96/EC should be updated to reflect changes in disease incidence and prevalence, the needs of the European Union and its Member States, as well as to ensure compliance with the criteria provided in the Annex to Decision No 1082/2013/EU.

(5) The list of case definitions should be updated in the light of new scientific information and evolving laboratory diagnostic criteria and practices.

(6) Both the list of diseases and the list of case definitions are brought into line with the World Health Organisation nomenclature according to the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems 10th Revision (ICD-10).

(7) The updated list of diseases should cover the following communicable diseases threatening public health that have emerged or re-emerged more recently in accordance with the criteria provided in the Annex to Decision No 1082/2013/EU for selection of communicable diseases and related special health issues to be covered by epidemiological surveillance:

  • Chikungunya: In view of autochthonous outbreaks of chikungunya virus infections in Italy (2007) and France (2010 and 2014), the widespread presence of competent vectors (Aedes albopictus) in the Mediterranean basin, and the return of travellers from endemic areas, systematic surveillance is necessary to prevent the spread of chikungunya virus in the Union,

  • Dengue: The large dengue outbreak in Madeira in 2012 and the presence of competent vectors (Aedes mosquitos), in particular in Mediterranean Member States, highlight the need for additional surveillance to help prevent the spread of the dengue virus in the Union,

  • Zika: The infection of pregnant women with the Zika virus can lead to the birth of children with severe neurological defects. Early detection and surveillance of people returning from affected areas are crucial. Surveillance data is needed to inform public health measures to prevent the introduction and spread of the Zika virus to the Union,

  • Lyme neuroborreliosis: The transmission of Lyme neuroborreliosis, a complication of Lyme disease which is caused by the bacterium Borrelia burgdorferi and transmitted to humans through the bite of infected ticks, is a concern for the Union. Systematic surveillance is needed to monitor its epidemiology in order to support measures to prevent and control the disease and its complications.

(8) Pursuant to Article 9 of Regulation (EC) No 851/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council(5), the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (‘ECDC’) has, at the Commission's request, provided scientific assistance on the establishment of case definitions for Chikungunya, Dengue, Lyme neuroborreliosis and Zika infections on the revision of case definitions for a number of other diseases(6), as well as on the revision of case definitions related to certain healthcare associated infections and to antimicrobial resistance(7). The case definitions should therefore be amended accordingly.

(9) The measures provided for in this Decision are in accordance with the opinion of the Committee on serious cross-border threats to health established under Article 18 of Decision No 1082/2013/EU.

(10) Accordingly, Decisions 2000/96/EC and 2002/253/EC should be replaced by this Decision,

HAS ADOPTED THIS DECISION:

Article 1U.K.

The communicable diseases and related special health issues to be covered by the epidemiological surveillance network are listed in Annex I.

Article 2U.K.

For the purposes of submitting data for the epidemiological surveillance of the communicable diseases and related special health issues listed in Annex I, Member States shall apply the case definitions specified in Annex II.

Article 3U.K.

Decisions 2000/96/EC and 2002/253/EC are hereby repealed. References to those Decisions shall be construed as references to this Decision.

Article 4U.K.

This Decision shall enter into force on the 20th day following that of its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union.

Done at Brussels, 22 June 2018.

For the Commission

The President

Jean-Claude Juncker

ANNEX IU.K. Communicable diseases and related special health issues to be covered by the epidemiological surveillance network

1.DISEASESU.K.

2.SPECIAL HEALTH ISSUESU.K.

2.1.

Nosocomial infections

2.2.

Antimicrobial resistance

ANNEX IIU.K.

1. EXPLANATION OF THE SECTIONS USED IN THE DEFINITION AND CLASSIFICATION OF CASES U.K.

CLINICAL CRITERIAU.K.

Clinical criteria include common and relevant signs and symptoms of the disease which either individually or in combination constitutes a clear or indicative clinical picture of the disease. They give the general outline of the disease and do not necessarily indicate all the features needed for individual clinical diagnosis.

LABORATORY CRITERIAU.K.

Laboratory criteria are a list of laboratory methods that are used to confirm a case. Usually only one of the listed tests will be enough to confirm the case. If a combination of methods is needed to meet the laboratory confirmation, this is specified. The type of specimen to be collected for the laboratory tests is only specified when only certain specimen types are considered relevant for the confirmation of a diagnosis. Laboratory criteria for a probable case are included for some agreed exceptional cases. Those laboratory criteria consist of a list of laboratory methods which can be used to support the diagnosis of a case but which are not confirmatory.

EPIDEMIOLOGICAL CRITERIA AND EPIDEMIOLOGICAL LINKU.K.

Epidemiological criteria are deemed to have been met when an epidemiological link can be established.

Epidemiological link, during the incubation period, means one of the following six:

— Human to human transmission

:

the fact that a person has had contact with a laboratory confirmed human case in such a way as to have had the opportunity to acquire the infection;

— Animal to human transmission

:

the fact that a person has had contact with an animal with a laboratory confirmed infection/colonization in such a way as to have had the opportunity to acquire the infection;

— Exposure to a common source

:

the fact that a person has been exposed to the same common source or vehicle of infection, as a confirmed human case;

— Exposure to contaminated food/drinking water

:

the fact that a person has consumed food or drinking water with a laboratory confirmed contamination or has consumed potentially contaminated products from an animal with a laboratory confirmed infection/colonization;

— Environmental exposure

:

the fact that a person has bathed in water or has had contact with a contaminated environmental source that has been laboratory confirmed;

— Laboratory exposure

:

the fact that a person has worked in a laboratory where there is a potential for exposure.

A person may be considered epidemiologically linked to a confirmed case if at least one case in the chain of transmission is laboratory confirmed. In case of an outbreak of faeco-oral or airborne transmitted infections, the chain of transmission does not necessarily need to be established to consider a case epidemiologically linked.

Transmission may occur by one or more of the following routes:

CASE CLASSIFICATIONU.K.

Cases are classified as ‘possible’, ‘probable’ and ‘confirmed’. The incubation periods for diseases are given in the additional information to facilitate the assessment of the epidemiological link.

POSSIBLE CASEU.K.

A possible case means a case classified as possible for reporting purposes. It is usually a case meeting the clinical criteria as described in the case definition without epidemiological or laboratory evidence of the disease in question. The definition of a case as possible has high sensitivity and low specificity. It allows for detection of most cases but some false positives cases will be included into this category.

PROBABLE CASEU.K.

A probable case means a case classified as probable for reporting purposes. It is usually a case with clinical criteria and an epidemiological link as described in the case definition. Laboratory tests for probable cases are specified only for some diseases.

CONFIRMED CASEU.K.

A confirmed case means a case classified as confirmed for reporting purposes. Confirmed cases are laboratory confirmed and may or may not fulfil the clinical criteria as described in the case definition. The definition of a case as confirmed is highly specific and less sensitive; therefore most of the collected cases will be true cases although some will be missed.

The clinical criteria of some diseases do not allude to the fact that many acute cases are asymptomatic (for example, hepatitis A, B and C, campylobacteriosis, salmonellosis) although these cases may still be important from a public health perspective on national level.

Confirmed cases fall in one of the three subcategories listed below. They will be assigned to one of those subcategories during the analysis of data using the variables collected within the context of the case information.

LABORATORY-CONFIRMED CASE WITH CLINICAL CRITERIAU.K.

The case meets the laboratory criteria for case confirmation and the clinical criteria included in the case definition.

LABORATORY-CONFIRMED CASE WITH UNKNOWN CLINICAL CRITERIAU.K.

The case meets the laboratory criteria for case confirmation but there is no information available regarding the clinical criteria (for example,only laboratory report).

LABORATORY-CONFIRMED CASE WITHOUT CLINICAL CRITERIAU.K.

The case meets the laboratory criteria for case confirmation but doesn't meet the clinical criteria in the case definition or is asymptomatic.

Note: For some of the conditions under surveillance the structure of the case definitions does not follow the typical structure of the case definition such as in the cases of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), healthcare associated infections and antimicrobial resistance.

2. ABBREVIATION LIST U.K.

1. AFP

:

acute flaccid paralysis

2. AIDS

:

acquired immune deficiency syndrome

3. AMR

:

antimicrobial resistance

4. Anti-HBc

:

hepatitis B core antibody

5. anti-HCV

:

hepatitis C virus specific antibody

6. ARI

:

acute respiratory infection

7. BAL

:

broncho-alveolar lavage

8. BCG

:

Bacille de Calmette et Guérin

9. BJ

:

bone and joint infection

10. BJ-BONE

:

osteomyelitis

11. BJ-DISC

:

disc space infection

12. BJ-JNT

:

joint or bursa infection

13. BoNT

:

botulinum neurotoxin

14. BSI

:

bloodstream infection

15. C-CVC

:

catheter-related — central venous catheter

16. CDAD

:

Clostridium difficile associated diarrhoea

17. CFU

:

colony-forming unit

18. CJD

:

Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease

19. CMV

:

cytomegalovirus

20. CNRL

:

EU Community Network of Reference Laboratories for human influenza

21. CNS

:

central nervous system

22. CNS-IC

:

central nervous system infection — intracranial infection

23. CNS-MEN

:

central nervous system infection — meningitis or ventriculitis

24. CNS-SA

:

central nervous system infection — spinal abscess without meningitis

25. C-PVC

:

catheter-related — peripheral venous catheter

26. CRI

:

catheter-related infection

27. CRS

:

Congenital rubella syndrome

28. CRT

:

capillary refilling time

29. CSF

:

Cerebrospinal fluid

30. CT scan

:

computed tomography scan

31. CVS

:

cardiovascular system infection

32. CVS-CARD

:

cardiovascular system infection — myocarditis or pericarditis

33. CVS-ENDO

:

cardiovascular system infection — endocarditis

34. CVS-MED

:

cardiovascular system infection — mediastinitis

35. CVS-VASC

:

cardiovascular system infection — arterial or venous infection

36. DFA

:

direct fluorescent antibody

37. DFA-TP

:

direct fluorescent antibody test for Treponema pallidum

38. DNA

:

deoxyribonucleic acid

39. DPA

:

distal protected aspirate

40. EARS-Net

:

European Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance Network

41. ECDC

:

European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control

42. ECOFFs

:

epidemiological cut-off values

43. EEG

:

electroencephalography

44. EENT

:

eye, ear, nose, throat, or mouth infection

45. EENT-CONJ

:

eye, ear, nose, throat, or mouth infection — conjunctivitis

46. EENT-EAR

:

eye, ear, nose, throat, or mouth infection — ear mastoid

47. EENT-EYE

:

eye, ear, nose, throat, or mouth infection — eye, other than conjunctivitis

48. EENT-ORAL

:

eye, ear, nose, throat, or mouth infection — oral cavity (mouth, tongue, or gums)

49. EENT-SINU

:

eye, ear, nose, throat, or mouth infection — sinusitis

50. EENT-UR

:

eye, ear, nose, throat, or mouth infection — upper respiratory tract, pharyngitis, laryngitis, epiglottitis

51. EFNS

:

European Federation of Neurological Societies

52. EIA

:

enzyme immunoassay

53. ELISA

:

enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay

54. EM

:

electron microscopy

55. EUCAST

:

European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing

56. FAMA

:

fluorescent antibody to membrane antigen

57. FTA-abs

:

fluorescent treponemal antibody absorption

58. FUO

:

fever of unknown origin

59. GI

:

gastrointestinal system infection

60. GI-CDI

:

gastrointestinal system infection — Clostridium difficile infection

61. GI-GE

:

gastrointestinal system infection — gastroenteritis (excl. CDI)

62. GI-GIT

:

gastrointestinal system infection — gastrointestinal tract (esophagus, stomach, small and large bowel, and rectum) excluding gastroenteritis and appendicitis

63. GI-HEP

:

gastrointestinal system infection — hepatitis

64. GI-IAB

:

gastrointestinal system infection — intraabdominal, not specified elsewhere including gallbladder, bile ducts, liver (excluding viral hepatitis), spleen, pancreas, peritoneum, subphrenic or subdiaphragmatic space, or other intraabdominal tissue or area not specified elsewhere

65. HAI

:

healthcare-associated infections

66. HbeAg

:

hepatitis B e antigen

67. HbsAg

:

hepatitis B surface antigen

68. HBV-DNA

:

hepatitis B nucleic acid

69. HCV-core

:

hepatitis C virus core antigen

70. HCV-RNA

:

hepatitis C virus nucleic acid

71. HIV

:

human immunodeficiency virus

72. HUS

:

haemolytic-uraemic syndrome

73. IAP

:

intubation-associated pneumonia

74. IFA

:

indirect fluorescent antibody

75. IgG

:

immunoglobulin G

76. IgM

:

immunoglobulin M

77. ILI

:

influenza-like illness

78. LGV

:

lymphogranuloma (venereum)

79. LPS

:

lipopolysaccharides

80. LRI

:

lower respiratory tract infection, other than pneumonia

81. LRI-BRON

:

lower respiratory tract infection — bronchitis, tracheobronchitis, bronchiolitis, tracheitis, without evidence of pneumonia

82. TBE

:

Tick-borne encephalitis

3. CASE DEFINITIONS OF COMMUNICABLE DISEASES U.K.

3.1.ANTHRAXU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following clinical forms:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two:

Positive nasal swab without clinical symptoms does not contribute to a confirmed diagnosis of a case.

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

3.2.BOTULISMU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following clinical forms:

The type of botulism usually encountered in infants (< 12 months of age) can affect children also over 12 months of age and occasionally adults, with altered gastrointestinal anatomy and microflora

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

3.3.BRUCELLOSISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with fever

And at least one of the following seven:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following five epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

3.4. CAMPYLOBACTER ENTERITISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following three:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two:

Note: Antimicrobial susceptibility testing of Campylobacter spp. should be performed on a representative subset of isolatesU.K.

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following five epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

Antimicrobial resistance U.K.

The results of antimicrobial susceptibility tests must be reported according to the methods and criteria agreed between ECDC and Member States as specified in the EU protocol for harmonised monitoring of antimicrobial resistance in human Salmonella and Campylobacter isolates(8).

3.5.CHIKUNGUNYA VIRUS DISEASEU.K.

Clinical Criteria (9) U.K.
Laboratory Criteria (10) U.K.
A.Probable caseU.K.
B.Confirmed caseU.K.

At least one of the following four:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

History of travel to, or residence in an area with documented on-going transmission of chikungunya, within the two-week period prior to the onset of symptoms

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical and the epidemiological criteria, and the laboratory criteria for a probable case

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria for a confirmed case

Note: Serological results should be interpreted according to previous exposure to other flaviviral infections and the flavivirus vaccination status. Confirmed cases in such situations should be validated by serum neutralization assay or other equivalent assays.U.K.

3.6.CHLAMYDIAL INFECTION, INCLUDING CHLAMYDIAL LYMPHOGRANULOMA (VENEREUM) (LGV)U.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following clinical forms:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.
Chlamydial infection non-LGV U.K.

At least one of the following three:

LGV U.K.

At least one of the following two:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

An epidemiological link by human to human transmission (sexual contact or vertical transmission)

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria

3.7.CHOLERAU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following two:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.
Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria;

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

3.8.CREUTZFELDT-JAKOB DISEASE (CJD)U.K.

Preconditions U.K.
Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least four of the following five:

Diagnostic Criteria U.K.
Diagnostic criteria for case confirmation: U.K.
Diagnostic criteria for a probable or a possible case: U.K.
Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

An epidemiological link by human to human transmission (for example, blood transfusion)

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case

Any person fulfilling the preconditions

AND

  • meeting the clinical criteria

    AND

  • a negative EEG for sporadic CJD(13)

B.

Probable case

Any person fulfilling the preconditions

AND

  • meeting the clinical criteria

    AND

  • a negative EEG for sporadic CJD(15)

    AND

  • a positive MRI brain scan

    OR

  • Any person fulfilling the preconditions

    AND

  • a positive tonsil biopsy

C.

Confirmed case

Any person fulfilling the preconditions

AND

meeting the diagnostic criteria for case confirmation

3.9.CRYPTOSPORIDIOSISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following two:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

One of the following five epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

3.10.DENGUEU.K.

Clinical Criteria (16) U.K.
Laboratory Criteria (17) U.K.
A.Probable caseU.K.
B.Confirmed caseU.K.

At least one of the following five:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

History of travel to, or residence in an area with documented on-going transmission of dengue, within the two-week period prior to the onset of symptoms

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical and the epidemiological criteria, and the laboratory criteria for a probable case

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria for a confirmed case.

3.11.DIPHTHERIAU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following clinical forms:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

Isolation of toxin-producing Corynebacterium diphtheriae, Corynebacterium ulcerans or Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis from a clinical specimen.

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria for classical respiratory diphtheria

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria for diphtheria (Classic Respiratory Diphtheria, Mild Respiratory Diphtheria, Cutaneous Diphtheria, Diphtheria of other sites) with an epidemiological link to a human confirmed case or with an epidemiological link to animal to human transmission

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria AND at least one of the clinical forms

3.12.ECHINOCOCCOSISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Not relevant for surveillance purposes

Diagnostic Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following five:

Epidemiological Criteria NA

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case NA

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the diagnostic criteria

3.13.GIARDIASIS (LAMBLIASIS)U.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following four:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

3.14.GONOCOCCAL INFECTIONU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following eight:

OR

Any newborn child with conjunctivitis

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

An epidemiological link by human to human transmission (sexual contact or vertical transmission)

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria

Antimicrobial resistance U.K.

For cases ascertained by culture, the results of antimicrobial susceptibility tests must be reported according to the methods and criteria agreed between ECDC and Member States as specified in the ECDC standard protocol for gonococcal antimicrobial resistance surveillance(18).

3.15. HAEMOPHILUS INFLUENZAE INFECTION, INVASIVE DISEASEU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Not relevant for surveillance purposes

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two:

Epidemiological Criteria NA

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case NA

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria

3.16.ACUTE HEPATITIS AU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with a discrete onset of symptoms (for example, fatigue, abdominal pain, loss of appetite, intermittent nausea and vomiting)

AND

At least one of the following three:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

3.17.HEPATITIS B(19) U.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Not relevant for surveillance purposes

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

Positive results of at least one or more of the following tests or combination of tests:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

Not relevant for surveillance purposes

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case NA

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria

3.18.HEPATITIS C(20) U.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Not relevant for surveillance purposes

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Epidemiological Criteria NA

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case NA

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria

3.19.HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS (HIV) INFECTION AND ACQUIRED IMMUNODEFICIENCY SYNDROME (AIDS)U.K.

Clinical Criteria (AIDS) U.K.

Any person who has any of the clinical conditions as defined in the European AIDS case definition for:

Laboratory Criteria (HIV) U.K.

Epidemiological Criteria NA

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case NA

C.

Confirmed case

  • HIV infection:

    Any person meeting the laboratory criteria for HIV infection.

  • AIDS:

    Any person meeting the clinical criteria for AIDS and the laboratory criteria for HIV infection.

3.20.INFLUENZAU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following clinical forms:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one the following four:

Sub typing of the influenza isolate should be performed, if possible

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

An epidemiological link by human to human transmission

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria (ILI or ARI)

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria (ILI or ARI) with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical (ILI or ARI) and the laboratory criteria

3.21.INFLUENZA A/H5N1U.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with one of the following two:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case

Any person meeting the clinical and the epidemiological criteria

B.

Probable case

Any person with a positive test for influenza A/H5 or A/H5N1 performed by a laboratory which is not a National Reference Laboratory participating in the EU Community Network of Reference Laboratories for human influenza (CNRL)

C.

Nationally confirmed case

Any person with a positive test for influenza A/H5 or A/H5N1 performed by a National Reference Laboratory participating in the EU Community Network of Reference Laboratories for human influenza (CNRL)

D.

WHO confirmed case

Any person with a laboratory confirmation by a WHO Collaborating Centre for H5

3.22.LEGIONNAIRES' DISEASEU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with pneumonia

Laboratory Criteria U.K.
Laboratory criteria for case confirmation U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Laboratory criteria for a probable case U.K.

At least one of the following four:

Epidemiological Criteria NA

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criterion AND at least one laboratory criterion for a probable case

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical criterion AND at least one laboratory criterion for a confirmed case

3.23.LEPTOSPIROSISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with

OR

At least two of the following eleven:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

3.24.LISTERIOSISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following five:

Listeriosis in pregnancy: U.K.

OR

At least one of the following five in the first month of life (neonatal listeriosis):

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria for a normal sterile site

OR

In a pregnancy-associated case (mother or newborn in the first month of life) meeting the laboratory criteria, only the mother is to be reported as a case.

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

3.25.LYME NEUROBORRELIOSISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.
Laboratory Criteria U.K.
A.Confirmed caseU.K.
B.Probable caseU.K.
Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

Not applicable

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case

Not applicable

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria and at least one of the laboratory criteria for probable cases

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria and at least one of the laboratory criteria for confirmed cases

3.26.MALARIAU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with fever OR a history of fever

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Differentiation of Plasmodium spp. should be performed if possible

Epidemiological Criteria NA

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case NA

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

3.27.MEASLESU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with fever

AND

AND at least one of the following three:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four:

Laboratory results need to be interpreted according to the vaccination status. If recently vaccinated, investigate for wild virus

Epidemiological criteria U.K.

An epidemiological link by human to human transmission

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person not recently vaccinated and meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

3.28. MENINGOCOCCAL INFECTION, INVASIVE DISEASEU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following symptoms:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

An epidemiological link by human to human transmission

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria

3.29.MUMPSU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with

AND

At least one of the following three:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Laboratory results need to be interpreted according to the vaccination status

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

An epidemiological link by human to human transmission

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person not recently vaccinated and meeting the laboratory criteria

In case of recent vaccination: any person with detection of wild-type mumps virus strain

3.30.PERTUSSISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with a cough lasting at least two weeks AND

OR

Any person diagnosed as pertussis by a physician

OR

Apnoeic episodes in infants

Notes: U.K.

All individuals including adults, adolescents or vaccinated children can present with atypical symptoms. Characteristics of cough should be investigated, particularly whether the cough is paroxysmal in nature, increases during the night and occurs in the absence of fever.

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

(i)

Isolation of Bordetella pertussis from a clinical specimen

(ii)

Detection of Bordetella pertussis nucleic acid in a clinical specimen

(iii)

Bordetella pertussis specific antibody response

Direct diagnosis (i)-(ii): Bordetella pertussis and its nucleic acid are best isolated/detected from nasopharyngeal samples.

Indirect diagnosis (iii): if possible ELISA should be performed using highly purified Pertussis Toxin and WHO reference sera as a standard. Results need to interpreted according to pertussis vaccination status. If vaccinated within the last few years before specimen collection, the titre of specific antibodies against Bordetella pertussis toxin may be a consequence of, or modified by, previous vaccination.

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

An epidemiological link by human to human transmission

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

3.31.PLAGUEU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following clinical forms:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria

3.32. STREPTOCOCCUS PNEUMONIAE INFECTION, INVASIVE DISEASEU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Not relevant for surveillance purposes

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Epidemiological Criteria NA

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case NA

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria

Antimicrobial resistance:U.K.

The results of antimicrobial susceptibility tests must be reported according to the methods and criteria agreed between ECDC and Member States as specified by ECDC's European Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance Network (EARS-Net)(22).

3.33.ACUTE POLIOMYELITISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person < 15 years of age with Acute flaccid paralysis (AFP)

OR

Any person in whom polio is suspected by a physician

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

3.34.Q FEVERU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following three:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

3.35.RABIESU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with an acute encephalomyelitis

AND

At least two of the following seven:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four:

Laboratory results need to be interpreted according to the vaccination or immunization status

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

3.36.RUBELLAU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with sudden onset of generalised maculo-papular rash

AND

At least one of the following five:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four:

Laboratory results need to be interpreted according to the vaccination status (possible persistence of IgM antibodies upon vaccination).

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

An epidemiological link to a confirmed case

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria who has not been recently vaccinated.

In case of recent vaccination, a person meeting the clinical criteria with detection of wild-type rubella virus strain is considered as a confirmed case.

Note: When rubella in pregnancy is suspected, further confirmation of a positive rubella IgM results is required for case management (for example, a rubella specific IgG avidity test, rubella IgM and comparison of rubella IgG levels on paired sera conducted in a reference laboratory).U.K.

3.37.CONGENITAL RUBELLA SYNDROMEU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.
Congenital rubella infection (CRI) U.K.

No clinical criteria can be defined for CRI

Congenital rubella syndrome (CRS) U.K.

Any infant < 1 year of age or any stillborn with:

At least two of the conditions listed in (A)

OR

One in category (A) and one in category (B)

(A)

(B)

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four:

Laboratory results need to be interpreted according to the vaccination status

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

Any infant or any stillborn born to a woman with a laboratory confirmed rubella infection during pregnancy by human to human transmission vertical transmission)

Case Classification Congenital Rubella U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any stillborn or infant either not tested OR with negative laboratory results with at least one of the following two:

  • An epidemiological link AND at least one of the conditions listed in the category ‘A’ CRS clinical criteria

  • Meeting the clinical criteria for CRS

C.

Confirmed case

Any stillborn meeting the laboratory criteria

OR

Any infant meeting the laboratory criteria AND at least one of the following two:

  • An epidemiological link

  • At least one of the conditions listed in the category ‘A’ CRS clinical criteria

3.38. SALMONELLA ENTERITISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following four:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two:

Note: Antimicrobial susceptibility testing of Salmonella enterica should be performed on a representative subset of isolatesU.K.

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following five epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

Antimicrobial resistance U.K.

The results of antimicrobial susceptibility tests must be reported according to the methods and criteria agreed between ECDC and Member States as specified in the EU protocol for harmonised monitoring of antimicrobial resistance in human Salmonella and Campylobacter isolates(24).

3.39.SEVERE ACUTE RESPIRATORY SYNDROME (SARS)U.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with fever or a history of fever

AND

At least one of the following three:

AND

At least one of the following four:

AND

No alternative diagnosis which can fully explain the illness

Laboratory Criteria U.K.
Laboratory criteria for case confirmation U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Laboratory criteria for a probable case U.K.

At least one of the following two:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Case Classification for the inter-epidemic period U.K.

Also applies during an outbreak in a non-affected country or area

A.

Possible case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link and meeting the laboratory criteria for a probable case

C.

Nationally confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria for case confirmation where the testing has been performed at a national reference laboratory

D.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria for case confirmation where the testing has been performed at a WHO SARS verification and reference laboratory

Case Classification during an outbreak U.K.

Applies during an outbreak in a country/area where at least one person has been laboratory confirmed by a WHO SARS verification and reference laboratory

A.

Possible case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link to a nationally confirmed or a confirmed case

C.

Nationally confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria for case confirmation where the testing has been performed at a national reference laboratory

D.

Confirmed case

One of the following three:

  • Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria for case confirmation where the testing has been performed at a WHO SARS verification and reference laboratory

  • Any nationally confirmed case with an epidemiological link to a chain of transmission where at least one case has been independently verified by a WHO SARS Reference and Verification Laboratory

  • Any person meeting the clinical criteria and with laboratory criteria for probable case with an epidemiological link to a chain of transmission where at least one case has been independently verified by a WHO SARS Reference and Verification Laboratory

3.40.SHIGA TOXIN/VEROCYTOTOXIN-PRODUCING E. COLI INFECTION (STEC/VTEC), INCLUDING HAEMOLYTIC-URAEMIC SYNDROME (HUS)U.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.
STEC/VTEC diarrhoea U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following two:

HUS U.K.

Any person with acute renal failure and at least one of the following two:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four:

Only for HUS the following can be used as a laboratory criterion to confirm STEC/VTEC:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following five epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case of STEC-associated HUS

Any person meeting the clinical criteria for HUS

B.

Probable case of STEC/VTEC

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case of STEC/VTEC

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

3.41.SHIGELLOSISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following four:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

For a confirmed case:

For a probable case:

Note: Antimicrobial susceptibility testing of Shigella should be performed, if possibleU.K.

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

OR

Any person meeting the clinical criteria and laboratory criteria for a probable case

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria for a confirmed case

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

Antimicrobial resistance U.K.

The results of antimicrobial susceptibility tests must be reported according to the methods and criteria agreed between ECDC and Member States.

3.42.SMALLPOXU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following two:

AND

Vesicles or firm pustules rash at the same stage of development with a centrifugal distribution

Laboratory Criteria U.K.
Laboratory criteria for case confirmation U.K.

At least one of the following two laboratory tests:

Laboratory results need to be interpreted according to the vaccination status

Laboratory criteria for a probable case U.K.
Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria and with at least one of the following two:

  • An epidemiological link to a confirmed human case by human to human transmission

  • Meeting the laboratory criteria for a probable case

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria for case confirmation

During an outbreak: any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

3.43.SYPHILISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.
Primary syphilis U.K.

Any person with one or several (usually painless) chancres in the genital, perineal, anal area or mouth or pharyngeal mucosa or elsewhere extragenitally

Secondary syphilis U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following five:

Early latent syphilis (< 1 year) U.K.

No symptoms and a history of symptoms compatible with those of the earlier stages of syphilis within the previous 12 months

Note that ocular and neurological manifestations may occur at any stage of syphilis.

Note that cases of late latent syphilis (> 1 year) are not under EU/EEA surveillance.

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.
Primary/secondary syphilis U.K.

An epidemiological link by human to human (sexual contact)

Early latent syphilis U.K.

An epidemiological link by human to human (sexual contact) within the 12 previous months

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria for case confirmation

3.44.CONGENITAL SYPHILISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any infant < 2 years of age with at least one of the following ten:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.
Laboratory criteria for case confirmation U.K.

At least one of the following three:

AND a reactive non-treponemal test (VDRL, RPR) in the child's serum

Laboratory criteria for a probable case U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

Any infant with an epidemiological link by human to human transmission (vertical transmission)

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any infant or child meeting the clinical criteria and with at least one of the following two:

  • An epidemiological link

  • Meeting the laboratory criteria for a probable case

C.

Confirmed case

Any infant meeting the laboratory criteria for case confirmation

3.45.TETANUSU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with acute onset of at least two of the following three:

Laboratory Criteria NA

Epidemiological Criteria NA

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria in the absense of a more likely diagnosis

C.

Confirmed case NA

3.46.TICK-BORNE VIRAL ENCEPHALITISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with symptoms of inflammation of the CNS (for example, meningitis, meningo-encephalitis, encephalomyelitis, encephaloradiculitis)

Laboratory Criteria (27) U.K.
Laboratory criteria for case confirmation: U.K.

At least one of the following five:

Laboratory criteria for a probable case: U.K.

Detection of TBE-specific IgM-antibodies in a unique serum sample

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

Exposure to a common source (unpasteurised dairy products)

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria and the laboratory criteria for a probable case,

OR

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and laboratory criteria for case confirmation

Note: Serological results should be interpreted according to previous exposure to other flaviviral infections and the flavivirus vaccination status. Confirmed cases in such situations should be validated by serum neutralization assay or other equivalent assays.U.K.

3.47.CONGENITAL TOXOPLASMOSISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Not relevant for surveillance purposes

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four:

Epidemiological Criteria NA

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case NA

C.

Confirmed case

Any infant meeting the laboratory criteria

3.48.TRICHINELLOSISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least three of the following six:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria and the laboratory criteria

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

3.49.TUBERCULOSISU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with the following two:

OR

A case discovered post-mortem with pathological findings consistent with active tuberculosis that would have indicated anti-tuberculosis antibiotic treatment had the patient been diagnosed before dying

Laboratory Criteria U.K.
Laboratory criteria for case confirmation U.K.

At least one of the following two:

Laboratory criteria for a probable case U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Epidemiological Criteria NA

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria and the laboratory criteria for a probable case

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria for case confirmation

Antimicrobial resistance U.K.

The results of antimicrobial susceptibility tests must be reported according to the methods and criteria agreed between ECDC and Member States as specified by the European Reference Laboratory Network for Tuberculosis and the European Tuberculosis Surveillance Network(28).

3.50.TULARAEMIAU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following clinical forms:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

3.51.TYPHOID AND PARATYPHOID FEVERSU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following two:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

3.52.VIRAL HAEMORRHAGIC FEVERS (VHF)U.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following two:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

3.53.WEST NILE VIRUS INFECTION (WNV)U.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following three:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.
Laboratory test for case confirmation U.K.

At least one of the following four:

Laboratory test for a probable case U.K.

WNV specific antibody response in serum

Laboratory results need to be interpreted according to flavivirus vaccination status

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria AND with at least one of the following two:

  • an epidemiological link

  • a laboratory test for a probable case

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the laboratory criteria for case confirmation

Note: Serological results should be interpreted according to previous exposure to other flaviviral infections and the flavivirus vaccination status. Confirmed cases in such situations should be validated by serum neutralization assay or other equivalent assays.U.K.

3.54.YELLOW FEVERU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with fever

AND

At least one of the following two:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following five:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

Travel in the last 1 week to a region where yellow fever cases are known or believed to have occurred

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person not recently vaccinated meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

In case of recent vaccination, a person with detection of wild-type yellow fever virus strain

Note: Serological results should be interpreted according to previous exposure to other flaviviral infections and the flavivirus vaccination status. Confirmed cases in such situations should be validated by serum neutralization assay or other equivalent assays.U.K.

3.55.ENTERITIS DUE TO YERSINIA ENTEROCOLITICA OR YERSINIA PSEUDOTUBERCULOSIS U.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.

Any person with at least one of the following five:

Laboratory Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following two:

Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

At least one of the following four epidemiological links:

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

Any person meeting the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link

C.

Confirmed case

Any person meeting the clinical and the laboratory criteria

Note: If the national surveillance system is not capturing clinical symptoms, all laboratory-confirmed individuals should be reported as confirmed cases.U.K.

3.56.ZIKA VIRUS DISEASEU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.
Laboratory Criteria U.K.
A.Confirmed caseU.K.

At least one of the following:

B.Probable caseU.K.
Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

History of travel to, or residence in an area with documented on-going transmission of Zika virus, within the two-week period prior to the onset of symptoms

OR

Sexual contact with a person recently exposed to or confirmed with Zika virus infection

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case

A person meeting the clinical and the epidemiological criteria, and the laboratory criteria for a probable case.

C.

Confirmed case

A person meeting the laboratory criteria for a confirmed case.

Note: Serological results should be interpreted according to previous exposure to other flaviviral infections and the flavivirus vaccination status. Confirmed cases in such situations should be validated by serum neutralization assay or other equivalent assays.U.K.

3.57.CONGENITAL ZIKA VIRUS DISEASEU.K.

Clinical Criteria U.K.
Laboratory Criteria U.K.
A.Confirmed caseU.K.
Epidemiological Criteria U.K.

Mother having had confirmed Zika virus infection during pregnancy.

Case Classification U.K.
A.

Probable case

An infant or foetus that meets the clinical criteria with an epidemiological link.

B.

Confirmed case

An infant or foetus that meets the clinical criteria and the laboratory criteria.

4. CASE DEFINITIONS OF SPECIAL HEALTH ISSUES U.K.

4.1.GENERAL CASE DEFINITION OF NOSOCOMIAL INFECTION (OR ‘HEALTHCARE-ASSOCIATED INFECTION (HAI)’)U.K.

A nosocomial infection associated to the current hospital stay is defined as infection that matches one of the case definitions AND

A nosocomial infection associated to a previous hospital stay is defined as an infection that matches one of the case definitions

AND

Note: For the purpose of point prevalence surveys, an active nosocomial infection present on the day of the survey is defined as an infection for which signs and symptoms of the infection are present on the survey date or signs and symptoms were present in the past and the patient is (still) receiving treatment for that infection on the survey date. The presence of symptoms and signs should be verified until the start of the treatment in order to determine whether the treated infection matches one of the case definitions of nosocomial infectionU.K.

4.1.1. BJ: Bone and joint infection U.K.
BJ-BONE: Osteomyelitis U.K.

Osteomyelitis must meet at least one of the following criteria:

Note reporting instruction U.K.

Report mediastinitis following cardiac surgery that is accompanied by osteomyelitis as surgical site infection-organ/space (SSI-O).

BJ-JNT: Joint or bursa U.K.

Joint or bursa infections must meet at least one of the following criteria:

BJ-DISC: Disc space infection U.K.

Vertebral disc space infection must meet at least one of the following criteria:

4.1.2. BSI: Bloodstream infection U.K.
BSI: Laboratory-confirmed bloodstream infection U.K.

One positive blood culture for a recognised pathogen

OR

Patient has at least one of the following signs or symptoms: fever (> 38 °C), chills, or hypotension

AND Two positive blood cultures for a common skin contaminant (from 2 separate blood samples, usually within 48 hours)

Skin contaminants = coagulase-negative staphylococci, Micrococcus spp., Propionibacterium acnes, Bacillus spp., Corynebacterium spp.

Source of bloodstream infection:

4.1.3. CNS: Central nervous system infection U.K.
CNS-IC: Intracranial infection (brain abscess, subdural or epidural infection, encephalitis) U.K.

Intracranial infection must meet at least one of the following criteria:

Note reporting instruction U.K.

If meningitis and a brain abscess are present together, report the infection as IC

CNS-MEN: Meningitis or ventriculitis U.K.

Meningitis or ventriculitis must meet at least one of the following criteria:

Note reporting instructions U.K.
CNS-SA: Spinal abscess without meningitis U.K.

An abscess of the spinal epidural or subdural space, without involvement of the cerebrospinal fluid or adjacent bone structures, must meet at least one of the following criteria:

Note reporting instruction U.K.

Report spinal abscess with meningitis as meningitis (CNS-MEN)

4.1.4. CRI: Catheter-related infection (29) U.K.
CRI1-CVC: Local CVC-related infection (no positive blood culture) U.K.
CRI1-PVC: Local PVC-related infection (no positive blood culture) U.K.
CRI2-CVC: General CVC-related infection (no positive blood culture) U.K.
CRI2-PVC: General PVC-related infection (no positive blood culture) U.K.
CRI3-CVC: microbiologically confirmed CVC-related bloodstream infection U.K.

AND positive culture with the same micro-organism of either:

CRI3-PVC: microbiologically confirmed PVC-related bloodstream infection U.K.

BSI occurring 48 hours before or after catheter removal (if any)

AND positive culture with the same micro-organism of either:

4.1.5. CVS: Cardiovascular system infection U.K.
CVS-VASC: Arterial or venous infection U.K.

Arterial or venous infection must meet at least one of the following criteria:

Note reporting instructions U.K.

Report infections of an arteriovenous graft, shunt, or fistula or intravascular cannulation site without organisms cultured from blood as CVS-VASC. Report CVS-VASC matching the third criterion as CRI1 or CRI2, as appropriate.

CVS-ENDO: Endocarditis U.K.

Endocarditis of a natural or prosthetic heart valve must meet at least one of the following criteria:

CVS-CARD: Myocarditis or pericarditis U.K.

Myocarditis or pericarditis must meet at least one of the following criteria:

CVS-MED: Mediastinitis U.K.

Mediastinitis must meet at least one of the following criteria:

Note reporting instruction U.K.

Report mediastinitis following cardiac surgery that is accompanied by osteomyelitis as SSI-O

4.1.6. EENT: Eye, ear, nose, throat, or mouth infection U.K.
EENT-CONJ: Conjunctivitis U.K.

Conjunctivitis must meet at least one of the following criteria:

Note reporting instructions U.K.
EENT-EYE: Eye, other than conjunctivitis U.K.

An infection of the eye, other than conjunctivitis, must meet at least one of the following criteria:

EENT-EAR: Ear mastoid U.K.

Ear and mastoid infections must meet at least one of the following criteria:

EENT-ORAL: Oral cavity (mouth, tongue, or gums) U.K.

Oral cavity infections must meet at least one of the following criteria:

Note reporting instruction U.K.

Report health care-associated primary herpes simplex infections of the oral cavity as ORAL; recurrent herpes infections are not healthcare-associated

EENT-SINU: Sinusitis U.K.

Sinusitis must meet at least 1 of the following criteria:

EENT-UR: Upper respiratory tract, pharyngitis, laryngitis, epiglottitis U.K.

Upper respiratory tract infections must meet at least 1 of the following criteria:

4.1.7. GI: Gastrointestinal system infection U.K.
GI-CDI: Clostridium difficile infection U.K.

A Clostridium difficile infection (previously also referred to as Clostridium difficile associated diarrhoea or CDAD) must meet at least one of the following criteria:

GI-GE: Gastroenteritis (excl. CDI) U.K.

Gastroenteritis must meet at least one of the following criteria:

GI-GIT: Gastrointestinal tract (esophagus, stomach, small and large bowel, and rectum) excluding gastroenteritis and appendicitis U.K.

Gastrointestinal tract infections, excluding gastroenteritis and appendicitis, must meet at least 1 of the following criteria:

GI-HEP: Hepatitis U.K.

Hepatitis must meet the following criterion:

Patient has at least 2 of the following signs or symptoms with no other recognized cause: fever (> 38 °C), anorexia, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, jaundice, or history of transfusion within the previous 3 months

AND at least 1 of the following:

Note reporting instructions U.K.
GI-IAB: Intraabdominal, not specified elsewhere including gallbladder, bile ducts, liver (excluding viral hepatitis), spleen, pancreas, peritoneum, subphrenic or subdiaphragmatic space, or other intraabdominal tissue or area not specified elsewhere U.K.

Intraabdominal infections must meet at least one of the following criteria:

Note reporting instruction U.K.

Do not report pancreatitis (an inflammatory syndrome characterized by abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting associated with high serum levels of pancreatic enzymes) unless it is determined to be infectious in origin

4.1.8. LRI: Lower respiratory tract infection, other than pneumonia U.K.
LRI-BRON: Bronchitis, tracheobronchitis, bronchiolitis, tracheitis, without evidence of pneumonia U.K.

Patient has no clinical or radiographic evidence of pneumonia

AND patient has at least two of the following signs or symptoms with no other recognized cause: fever (> 38 °C), cough, new or increased sputum production, rhonchi, wheezing

AND at least one of the following:

Note reporting instruction U.K.

Do not report chronic bronchitis in a patient with chronic lung disease as an infection unless there is evidence of an acute secondary infection, manifested by change in organism

LRI-LUNG: Other infections of the lower respiratory tract U.K.

Other infections of the lower respiratory tract must meet at least one of the following criteria:

Note reporting instruction U.K.

Report lung abscess or empyema without pneumonia as LUNG

4.1.9. NEO: Specific neonatal case definitions U.K.
NEO-CSEP: Clinical Sepsis U.K.

ALL of the three following criteria:

AND 2 of the following criteria (without other apparent cause):

NEO-LCBI: Laboratory-confirmed BSI U.K.

at least two of: temperature > 38 °C or < 36,5 °C or temperature instability, tachycardia or bradycardia, apnoea, extended capillary refilling time (CRT), metabolic acidosis, hyperglycaemia, other sign of BSI such as apathy

AND

a recognised pathogen other than coagulase-negative staphylococci cultured from blood or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF; this is included because meningitis in this age group is usually haematogenous, so positive CSF can be regarded as evidence of BSI even if blood cultures are negative or were not taken)

Note reporting instructions U.K.
NEO-CNSB: Laboratory-confirmed BSI with coagulase-negative staphylococci U.K.
Note reporting instructions U.K.
NEO-PNEU: Pneumonia U.K.
NEO-NEC: Necrotising enterocolitis U.K.

Histopathological evidence of necrotising enterocolitis

OR

at least one characteristic radiographic abnormality (pneumoperitoneum, pneumatosis intestinalis, unchanging ‘rigid’ loops of small bowel) plus at least two of the following without other explanation: vomiting, abdominal distention, prefeeding residuals, persistent microscopic or gross blood in stools

4.1.10. PN: Pneumonia U.K.

Two or more serial chest X-rays or CT-scans with a suggestive image of pneumonia for patients with underlying cardiac or pulmonary disease. In patients without underlying cardiac or pulmonary disease one definitive chest X-ray or CT-scan is sufficient

AND at least one of the following symptoms

AND at least one of the following (or at least two if clinical pneumonia only = PN 4 and PN 5)

and according to the used diagnostic method

(a)

Bacteriologic diagnostic performed by:

Positive quantitative culture from minimally contaminated LRT(30) specimen (PN 1)U.K.
  • Broncho-alveolar lavage (BAL) with a threshold of ≥ 104 CFU(31)/ml or ≥ 5 % of BAL obtained cells contains intracellular bacteria on direct microscopic exam (classified on the diagnostic category BAL)

  • Protected brush (PB Wimberley) with a threshold of ≥ 103 CFU/ml

  • Distal protected aspirate (DPA) with a threshold of ≥ 103 CFU/ml

Positive quantitative culture from possibly contaminated LRT specimen (PN 2)U.K.
  • Quantitative culture of LRT specimen (for example, endotracheal aspirate) with a threshold of 106 CFU/ml

(b)

Alternative microbiology methods (PN 3)

  • Positive blood culture not related to another source of infection

  • Positive growth in culture of pleural fluid

  • Pleural or pulmonary abscess with positive needle aspiration

  • Histologic pulmonary exam shows evidence of pneumonia

  • Positive exams for pneumonia with virus or particular germs (for example, Legionella, Aspergillus, mycobacteria, mycoplasma, Pneumocystis jirovecii):

    • Positive detection of viral antigen or antibody from respiratory secretions (for example, EIA, FAMA, shell vial assay, PCR)

    • Positive direct exam or positive culture from bronchial secretions or tissue

    • Seroconversion (for example, influenza viruses, Legionella, Chlamydia)

    • Detection of antigens in urine (Legionella)

(c)

Others

  • Positive sputum culture or non-quantitative LRT specimen culture (PN 4)

  • No positive microbiology (PN 5)

Notes: U.K.
Intubation-associated pneumonia (IAP) U.K.

A pneumonia is defined as intubation-associated (IAP) if an invasive respiratory device was present (even intermittently) in the 48 hours preceding the onset of infection

Note: Pneumonia for which intubation was started on the day of onset without additional information on the sequence of the events is not considered as IAPU.K.

4.1.11. REPR: Reproductive tract infection U.K.
REPR-EMET: Endometritis U.K.

Endometritis must meet at least 1 of the following criteria:

Note reporting instruction U.K.

Report postpartum endometritis as a health care-associated infection unless the amniotic fluid is infected at the time of admission or the patient was admitted 48 hours after rupture of the membrane

REPR-EPIS: Episiotomy U.K.

Episiotomy infections must meet at least 1 of the following criteria:

REPR-VCUF: Vaginal cuff U.K.

Vaginal cuff infections must meet at least 1 of the following criteria:

Note reporting instruction U.K.

Report vaginal cuff infections as SSI-O if other SSI criteria are met (within 30 days following hysterectomy).

REPR-OREP: Other infections of the male or female reproductive tract (epididymis, testes, prostate, vagina, ovaries, uterus, or other deep pelvic tissues, excluding endometritis or vaginal cuff infections) U.K.

Other infections of the male or female reproductive tract must meet at least 1 of the following criteria:

Note reporting instructions U.K.
4.1.12. SSI: Surgical site infection U.K.

Note: All definitions are to be assumed to be confirmed for the purposes of surveillance reporting.U.K.

Superficial incisional (SSI-S) U.K.

Infection occurs within 30 days after the operation AND infection involves only skin and subcutaneous tissue of the incision AND at least one of the following:

Deep incisional (SSI-D) U.K.

Infection occurs within 30 days after the operation if no implant is left in place or within 90 days if implant is in place AND the infection appears to be related to the operation AND infection involves deep soft tissue (for example, fascia, muscle) of the incision AND at least one of the following:

Organ/Space (SSI-O) U.K.

Infection occurs within 30 days after the operation if no implant is left in place or within 90 days if implant is in place AND the infection appears to be related to the operation AND infection involves any part of the anatomy (for example, organs and spaces) other than the incision which was opened or manipulated during an operation AND at least one of the following:

4.1.13. SST: Skin and soft tissue infection U.K.
SST-SKIN: Skin infection U.K.

Skin infections must meet at least one of the following criteria:

Note reporting instructions U.K.
SST-ST: Soft tissue (necrotizing fascitis, infectious gangrene, necrotizing cellulitis, infectious myositis, lymphadenitis, or lymphangitis) U.K.

Soft tissue infections must meet at least 1 of the following criteria:

Note reporting instructions U.K.
SST-DECU: Decubitus ulcer, including both superficial and deep infections U.K.

Decubitus ulcer infections must meet the following criterion:

SST-BURN: Burn U.K.

Burn infections must meet at least 1 of the following criteria:

SST-BRST: Breast abscess or mastitis U.K.

A breast abscess or mastitis must meet at least one of the following criteria:

AND physician diagnosis of breast abscess

4.1.14. SYS: Systemic infection U.K.
SYS-DI: Disseminated infection U.K.

Disseminated infection is infection involving multiple organs or systems, without an apparent single site of infection, usually of viral origin, and with signs or symptoms with no other recognized cause and compatible with infectious involvement of multiple organs or systems

Note reporting instructions U.K.
SYS-CSEP: treated unidentified severe infection U.K.

Patient has at least one of the following

And blood culture not done or no organisms or antigen detected in blood

And no apparent infection at another site

And physician institutes treatment for sepsis

Note reporting instructions U.K.

Do not use this code unless absolutely needed

For CSEP in neonates, use NEO-CSEP case definition (see below)

4.1.15. UTI: Urinary tract infection U.K.
UTI-A: microbiologically confirmed symptomatic UTI U.K.

Patient has at least one of the following signs or symptoms with no other recognized cause: fever (> 38 °C), urgency, frequency, dysuria, or suprapubic tenderness

AND

patient has a positive urine culture, that is, ≥ 105 microorganisms per ml of urine with no more than two species of microorganisms.

UTI-B: not microbiologically confirmed symptomatic UTI U.K.

Patient has at least two of the following with no other recognized cause: fever (> 38 °C), urgency, frequency, dysuria, or suprapubic tenderness

AND

at least one of the following:

Asymptomatic bacteriuria should not be reported, but bloodstream infections secondary to asymptomatic bacteriuria are reported as BSI with source (origin) S-UTI

A urinary tract infection is defined as catheter-associated if an indwelling urinary catheter was present (even intermittently) in the 7 days preceding the onset of infection

4.2.GENERAL CASE DEFINITION OF BLOOD STREAM INFECTION DUE TO SPECIFIC PATHOGENSU.K.

Clinical criteria U.K.

Not relevant for surveillance purposes

Laboratory criteria U.K.

At least one blood culture positive for Staphylococcus aureus or Klebsiella pneumoniae or Escherichia coli or Enterococcus faecium or Enterococcus faecalis or Pseudomonas aeruginosa or Acinetobacter species or Streptococcus pneumoniae.

Epidemiological criteria U.K.

Not relevant for surveillance purposes

Case classification U.K.
A.

Possible case NA

B.

Probable case NA

C.

Confirmed case

Antimicrobial resistance U.K.

The results of antimicrobial susceptibility tests must be reported according to the methods and criteria agreed between ECDC and Member States as specified by ECDC's European Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance Network (EARS-Net)(32), and in particular:

4.3.GENERIC CASE DEFINITION AND CLASSIFICATION OF ANTIMICROBIAL REISTANCE TO ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTSU.K.

Clinical resistance to antimicrobial agents U.K.
Definition U.K.

A micro-organism is classified as clinically susceptible, clinically intermediate, or clinically resistant to an antimicrobial agent by applying the appropriate EUCAST clinical breakpoints in a standardized methodology (or a methodology calibrated to a standardized methodology)(33), i.e. clinical minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) breakpoints and their inhibition zone diameter correlates. Breakpoints may be altered with legitimate changes in circumstances.

Classification U.K.
Clinically Susceptible (S)U.K.
Clinically Intermediate (I)U.K.
Clinically Resistant (R)U.K.

Clinical breakpoints(33) are presented as:

Pandrug-resistant (PDR)U.K.
Microbiological resistance to antimicrobial agents U.K.
Phenotypic definition U.K.

A microorganism is classified as having a wild-type phenotype or a non-wild-type phenotype for a species according to the EUCAST epidemiological cut-off concentrations (ECOFFs) in a standardized methodology (or a methodology calibrated to a standardized methodology)(36) (37) based on species-specific MIC distributions and their inhibition zone diameter correlates.

Phenotypic classification U.K.
Wild-type (WT) phenotypeU.K.
Non-wild-type (NWT) phenotypeU.K.

ECOFFs are presented as(37)

Identification of an acquired antimicrobial resistance mechanism (for example, drug inactivating enzyme, modification of drug target protein type, efflux pump)U.K.

Expression of an acquired antimicrobial resistance mechanism by a micro-organism can be determined in vitro and the type of mechanism identified using standardized methodology according to the EUCAST guidelines for detection of resistance mechanisms and specific resistances of clinical and/or epidemiological importance(38)

Genotypic definition U.K.

A microorganism is classified as harbouring or lacking a genetic determinant or combination of determinants conferring to it a non-wild type susceptibility phenotype in relation to antimicrobial agent (transferable gene or core gene mutation). The presence of a genetic determinant or combination of determinants conferring to it a non-wild type susceptibility phenotype in relation to one or several antimicrobial agents can be shown by detecting and identifying the corresponding nucleic acid sequence(s) in a bacterial genome.

Genotypic classification U.K.

Genotypes are reported as:

(2)

Decision No 2119/98/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 September 1998 setting up a network for the epidemiological surveillance and control of communicable diseases in the Community (OJ L 268, 3.10.1998, p. 1).

(3)

Commission Decision 2000/96/EC of 22 December 1999 on the communicable diseases to be progressively covered by the Community network under Decision No 2119/98/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council (OJ L 28, 3.2.2000, p. 50).

(4)

Commission Decision 2002/253/EC of 19 March 2002 laying down case definitions for reporting communicable diseases to the Community network under Decision No 2119/98/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council (OJ L 86, 3.4.2002, p. 44).

(5)

Regulation (EC) No 851/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 April 2004 establishing a European Centre for disease prevention and control (OJ L 142, 30.4.2004, p. 1).

(6)

Botulism, brucellosis, campylobacter enteritis, giardiasis, gonococcal infection, listeriosis, rubella, salmonella enteritis, shiga toxin/verocytotoxin-producing E. coli infection, shigellosis, syphilis and congenital syphilis, tetanus, tuberculosis, typhoid and paratyphoid fevers, pertussis, enteritis due to Yersinia enterocolitica or Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and healthcare-associated infections.

(7)

In general and, more specifically, campylobacter enteritis, gonococcal infection, salmonella enteritis, shigellosis, tuberculosis and bloodstream infections due to specific pathogens, in particular Staphylococcus aureus (susceptibility to meticillin and other anti-staphylococcal beta-lactams), Enterococcus faecium and Enterococcus faecalis (susceptibility to glycopeptides), Klebsiella pneumoniae and Escherichia coli (susceptibility to carbapenems and to colistin in carbapenem-resistant isolates), and Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Acinetobacter species (susceptibility to carbapenems).

(8)

The EU protocols, including future updates, can be found at the following ECDC webpage: https://ecdc.europa.eu/en/publications-data/eu-protocol-harmonised-monitoring-antimicrobial-resistance-human-salmonella-and-0

(9)

Clinical criteria should be interpreted by taking into account the presence of an alternative diagnosis that can fully explain the illness.

(10)

Serological results should be interpreted according to previous exposure to other alphaviral infections.

(11)

Depression, anxiety, apathy, withdrawal, delusions

(12)

This includes both frank pain and/or dysaesthesia

(13)

The typical appearance of the EEG in sporadic CJD consists of generalised periodic complexes at approximately one per second. These may occasionally be seen in the late stages of vCJD

(14)

Tonsil biopsy is not recommended routinely nor in cases with EEG appearances typical of sporadic CJD, but may be useful in suspect cases in which the clinical features are compatible with vCJD and MRI does not show pulvinar high signal

(15)

The typical appearance of the EEG in sporadic CJD consists of generalised periodic complexes at approximately one per second. These may occasionally be seen in the late stages of vCJD

(16)

Clinical criteria should be interpreted by taking into account the presence of an alternative diagnosis that can fully explain the illness.

(17)

Serological results should be interpreted according to previous exposure to other flaviviral infections and the flavivirus vaccination status. Confirmed cases in such situations should be validated by serum neutralization assay or other equivalent assays.

(18)

The ECDC standard protocol for gonococcal antimicrobial resistance surveillance is published yearly as part of the annexes of the annual report on Gonococcal antimicrobial susceptibility surveillance in Europe.

See: European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. Gonococcal antimicrobial susceptibility surveillance in Europe, www.ecdc.europa.eu

(19)

When reporting cases of Hepatitis B, the Member States should distinguish between acute and chronic disease, according to ECDC requirements.

(20)

When reporting cases of Hepatitis C, the Member States should distinguish between acute and chronic disease, according to ECDC requirements.

(21)

EFNS guidelines on the diagnosis and management of European Lyme neuroborreliosis, European Journal of Neurology 17, 8-16: doi:10.1111/j.1468-1331.2009.02862.x

(22)

The criteria for reporting are published each year as part of the Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) reporting protocol. See: The European Surveillance system. Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) reporting protocol. European Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance Network (EARS-Net). www.ecdc.europa.eu

(23)

In elimination settings, additional testing may be considered in certain situations to exclude false-positive IgM results (WHO Manual for the Laboratory Surveillance of Measles and Rubella Viruses, 2017).

(24)

The EU protocols, including future updates, can be found at the following ECDC webpage: https://ecdc.europa.eu/en/publications-data/eu-protocol-harmonised-monitoring-antimicrobial-resistance-human-salmonella-and-0

(25)

A close contact is a person who has cared for, lived with, or having had direct contact with the respiratory secretions, body fluids and/or excretions (e.g. faeces) of cases of SARS.

(26)

In this context the term ‘health-care worker’ includes all hospital staff. The definition of the health care unit in which the cluster occurs will depend on the local situation. Unit size may range from an entire health care facility if small, to a single department or ward of a large tertiary hospital.

(27)

Serological results should be interpreted according to the vaccination status and previous exposure to other flaviviral infections. Confirmed cases in such situations should be validated by serum neutralization assay or other equivalent assays.

(28)

The criteria for reporting are included each year in the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control/WHO Regional Office for Europe report on Tuberculosis surveillance and monitoring in Europe. www.ecdc.europa.eu.

(29)

CVC = central vascular catheter, PVC = peripheral vascular catheter. Central vascular catheter colonisation should not be reported. A CRI3 (-CVC or -PVC) is also a bloodstream infection with source C-CVC or C-PVC respectively; however when a CRI3 is reported, the BSI should not be reported in the point prevalence survey; microbiologically confirmed catheter-related BSI should be reported as CRI3

(30)

LRT = Lower Respiratory Tract

(31)

CFU = Colony Forming Units

(32)

The criteria for reporting are published each year as part of the Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) reporting protocol. See: Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) reporting protocol. European Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance Network (EARS-Net). www.ecdc.europa.eu

(33)

http://www.eucast.org/clinical_breakpoints/. Equivalent quantitative antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) methods may be used instead of MIC or disk diffusion if endorsed by EUCAST.

(34)

Magiorakos AP, et al. Multidrug-resistant, extensively drug-resistant and pandrug-resistant bacteria: an international expert proposal for interim standard definitions for acquired resistance. Clin Microbiol Infect. 2012 Mar;18(3):268-81. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1198743X14616323

(35)

Magiorakos AP, et al. Multidrug-resistant, extensively drug-resistant and pandrug-resistant bacteria: an international expert proposal for interim standard definitions for acquired resistance. Clin Microbiol Infect. 2012 Mar;18(3):268-81. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1198743X14616323

(36)

http://www.eucast.org/ast_of_bacteria/

(37)

http://www.eucast.org/mic_distributions_and_ecoffs/

(38)

http://www.eucast.org/fileadmin/src/media/PDFs/EUCAST_files/Resistance_mechanisms/EUCAST_detection_of_resistance_mechanisms_v1.0_20131211.pdf