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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, March 2007, p. 915-920, Vol. 45, No. 3
0095-1137/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.01590-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Molecular and Spatial Epidemiology of Cryptosporidiosis in Children in a Semiurban Community in South India
Sitara Swarna Rao Ajjampur,1
Beryl Primrose Gladstone,2
David Selvapandian,2
Jaya Prakash Muliyil,2
Honorine Ward,3 and
Gagandeep Kang1*
Departments of Gastrointestinal Sciences,1
Community Health, Christian Medical College, Vellore TN 632004, India,2
Division of Geographic Medicine and Infectious Diseases, Tufts-New England Medical Center, Tufts University School of Medicine, 750 Washington St., Boston, Massachusetts 021113
Received 2 August 2006/
Returned for modification 7 November 2006/
Accepted 5 January 2007

ABSTRACT
Cryptosporidium spp. are a leading cause of diarrhea in Indian
children, but there are no data for prevalent species or subgenotypes.
Genetic characterization of
Cryptosporidium spp. by PCR-restriction
fragment length polymorphism and spatial analysis of cases using
Geographical Information Systems technology was carried out
for 53 children with cryptosporidial diarrhea in an urban slum.
The two most common species were
C. hominis (81%) and
C. parvum (12%). Other species identified were
C. felis and
C. parvum (mouse genotype). Five subgenotypes were identified at the
Cpgp40/15 locus. Subgenotype Ia predominated among
C. hominis isolates,
and all
C. parvum isolates were subgenotype Ic.
C. hominis infection
was associated with a greater severity of diarrhea. Sequencing
of the
Cpgp40/15 alleles of
C. felis and
C. parvum (mouse genotype)
revealed similarities to subgenotype IIa and
C. meleagridis,
respectively. Space-time analysis revealed two clusters of infection
due to
C. hominis Ia, with a peak in February 2005. This is
the first study to demonstrate space-time clustering of a single
subgenotype of
C. hominis in a setting where cryptosporidiosis
is endemic. Molecular characterization and spatial analysis
have the potential to further the understanding of disease and
transmission in the community.

INTRODUCTION
Cryptosporidiosis is a major cause of diarrhea in children with
and without human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in
developing countries (
8,
16,
21,
27,
30). In these countries,
cryptosporidial infection in early childhood has been reported
to be associated with subsequent impairment in growth, physical
fitness, and cognitive function (
5,
20). In India,
Cryptosporidium spp. are a leading cause of infectious diarrhea in children,
with reported positivity rates ranging from 1.1% to 18.9% (
11,
22,
24,
28).
The epidemiology of cryptosporidiosis in humans is not completely understood due to the existence of multiple transmission routes such as person-to-person, animal-to-person, waterborne, food-borne, and possible airborne transmission (1). More recently, genetic characterization of Cryptosporidium spp. at polymorphic loci has facilitated the development of molecular approaches with which to study the epidemiology of cryptosporidiosis (35, 36). Extensive polymorphisms in the Cpgp40/15 gene have been widely used to define at least eight allelic subgroups or subgenotypes of the parasite (14, 32). The majority of human infections, including those in developing countries, are caused by C. hominis (14, 17, 19, 29, 31, 33). There have been several studies of the prevalence rates of cryptosporidial infections in children in India, but there is only one report of the species or genotypes of Cryptosporidium spp. from children in eastern India (3), and none from southern India. Furthermore, there have been no studies of the genetic characterization of Cryptosporidium sp. infections in children in a well-defined community setting.
Geographical Information Systems (GIS) methods have previously been used to map the locations of residences of sporadic cases as well as in ecosystem studies of cryptosporidiosis (7, 10). The use of GIS to study the spatial distribution of cases has been found to be useful in identifying geographical variation but not necessarily for identifying the reasons for this variation. In this study, we determined the species, genotypes, and subgenotypes of Cryptosporidium sp. infections in a well-defined cohort of children in a semiurban community in Vellore, South India. A spatial analysis of children with cryptosporidial diarrhea was also carried out in order to study the transmission dynamics of cryptosporidiosis in this community.
(These data were presented, in part, at the American Society for Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 54th Annual Conference, Washington, DC, December 2005.)

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Study population, sample collection, and screening.
The study subjects are part of an ongoing birth cohort of 452
children recruited for a study of rotaviral infections from
a semiurban slum area with a population of approximately 33,390
in Vellore, in South India. The study was approved by the Institutional
Review Board of Christian Medical College, and informed consent
was obtained from the parents. The children were enrolled at
birth and followed for 3 years on a twice-weekly basis. Demographic
and birth details were recorded at baseline. In this study,
an episode was defined as at least 1 day of diarrhea (with the
occurrence of three or more watery stools in a 24-h period)
preceded and followed by 2 or more days without diarrhea. The
episode was considered to have ended on the day bowel movements
returned to normal (
18). Children with diarrhea were assessed
clinically, and details of the number of stools passed per day,
any associated fever or vomiting, and treatment given were recorded
daily until the cessation of diarrhea. These data were collected
to calculate the Vesikari score, a scale used in rotaviral infection
diarrhea to assess severity (
23). Fecal samples collected from
1,949 of a total of 1,989 episodes of diarrhea over 14,584 child-months
(the sum of months of follow-up of all children) of follow-up
from April 2002 to January 2006 were screened for
Cryptosporidium spp. by microscopic examination of modified acid-fast-stained
smears, and these samples were also tested for other bacterial
and parasitic diarrheal pathogens by culture and microscopy
and for rotavirus by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (Dako
Cytomation rotavirus IDEIA, Ely, United Kingdom).
DNA isolation, identification of species, genotyping, and subgenotyping.
Briefly, DNA extracted from fecal samples positive for Cryptosporidium spp. by microscopy with a QIAamp stool DNA minikit (QIAGEN Inc, Valencia, CA) was subjected to PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) at the small-subunit (SSU) rRNA locus using enzymes SspI and VspI for species and genotype determination (34) and PCR-RFLP at the Cpgp40/15 locus using enzymes AluI and RsaI for subgenotyping (14) as previously described. Samples negative for SSU rRNA by PCR were analyzed by PCR-RFLP at the COWP and TRAP-C loci (25, 26). In samples where ambiguous results were obtained by PCR-RFLP at the Cpgp40/15 locus, the PCR products were purified using a QIAquick kit (QIAGEN Inc, Valencia, CA), sequenced by the dye terminator method, and compared with sequences of a known subgenotype using a ClustalW alignment algorithm of the AlignX program of Vector NTI, Suite 8 (Informax, North Bethesda, MD). The secondary PCR products of two C. felis samples, one obtained from an HIV-infected adult from a previous study (19) and one from a child in the present study, were cloned into a PCR 2.1-TOPO vector (Invitrogen Corp., Carlsbad, CA), and the inserts were sequenced. The Cpgp40/15 PCR product of the C. parvum (mouse) was also sequenced and analyzed. Phylogenetic analysis was performed using the maximum-likelihood method with BioEdit Sequence Alignment Editor version 5.0.0 (6).
Spatial analysis.
The Poisson probability model (12) was used to identify any spatial or space-time clusters for high rates with the maximum spatial cluster size of 50% of the total population. Spatial analysis was carried out for cryptosporidial infections occurring from birth until January 2006 to detect any clustering of episodes by using SaTScan version 6.0 (13). The streets and the study houses of the urban slum area had been previously mapped and geographically referenced using ArcView GIS 3.3 (Environmental Systems Research, Inc., CA). The way points and track points were collected using a GPS Garmin V and downloaded as layers using GPS Utility 4.10.4. (GPS Utility Ltd., Southampton, England).
Statistical analyses.
Data generated during this study were double entered using Epi Info 6.4. software (CDC, Atlanta, GA) and analyzed using STATA version 9.0 (Stata Corp., College Station, TX). Statistical comparisons were made using Fisher's exact and chi-square tests.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
Sequences from this study were deposited in GenBank with accession numbers DQ 848995 to -97.

RESULTS
Cases.
Of the 1,949 diarrheal episodes screened, one or more diarrheal
agents was detected in 591 episodes.
Cryptosporidium spp. alone
accounted for 7.61% of episodes and was the third most common
etiologic agent after rotavirus and
Giardia spp. Fifty-eight
diarrheal episodes associated with
Cryptosporidium spp. were
identified in 53 children, with 5 children having two episodes
each. Mixed infections from rotavirus,
Shigella flexneri,
Vibrio cholerae, or
Giardia were identified in four children. In the
children with repeated episodes of cryptosporidial diarrhea,
the duration between the episodes ranged from 10 days to more
than 1 year. Fifty-four of these episodes were treated with
oral rehydration. None of the children with cryptosporidial
diarrhea was hospitalized or required intravenous rehydration.
In 7 of the 58 episodes, the child was found to be dehydrated
clinically, based on assessments carried out in the field. A
total of 5 of 452 children in the cohort died during the period
of follow-up, with one death each due to congenital anomalies
and a seizure disorder and three deaths due to diarrhea, but
these diarrheal episodes were not associated with cryptosporidiosis.
Species and subgenotypes.
The species most commonly identified was C. hominis (47/58, 81%), followed by C. parvum in (7/58, 12.1%) and C. felis (3/58, 5.2%). One sample, which was negative by SSU (18S) rRNA PCR, was identified by COWP PCR. On comparison of the three PCR-based techniques with microscopy-positive samples, others have found a sensitivity of 97, 91, and 66% for the for the 18S rRNA, COWP, and TRAP-C1 gene fragments, respectively (15). Given this sensitivity, it is possible that 1 of 58 samples, tested twice, could be negative by SSU PCR but positive by COWP PCR. One sample with C. parvum (mouse genotype) was also identified (Fig. 1A). Subgenotyping of the 47 C. hominis-positive samples at the Cpgp40/15 locus showed that subgenotype Ia was the most common (35/47, 74.5%), followed by Id (8/47, 17%), Ie (3/47, 6.4%), and Ib (1/58, 1.7%). Subgenotyping of the C. parvum samples revealed that all seven were subgenotype Ic (Fig. 1B). In the five children with repeat infections, both infections were caused by C. hominis subgenotype Ia in four children and the remaining child had C. felis and C. hominis Ia infections.
Cryptosporidium felis and
C. parvum (mouse genotype) samples
could not be classified into any previously described subgenotypes
by PCR-RFLP at the
Cpgp40/15 locus (Fig.
1B). Phylogenetic analysis
of the
Cpgp40/15 sequences revealed that the
C. felis Cpgp40/15 allele was most closely related to the
C. parvum IIa subgenotype
(identities of 0.759/100% similarity over 795 bp) (Fig.
2),
while the
C. parvum (mouse genotype) allele was most closely
related to the
C. meleagridis allele (0.611/96% identity over
326 bp).
Association of clinical characteristics with Cryptosporidium spp. and subgenotypes.
There were no significant differences in demographic (age, gender,
birth order, educational status of the mother, or occupation
of the father) or clinical (nutritional status assessed by weight
and height for age, vomiting, fever, and hospital visits) characteristics
between
C. hominis-infected children and those infected with
other species (Table
1) or between subgenotype Ia-infected children
and those infected with other subtypes. However,
C. hominis-infected
children had a significantly greater severity of diarrhea (
P,
<0.05, Fisher's exact test). There was also a trend toward
a longer average duration of diarrhea in
C. hominis-infected
children (
P = 0.09) than in those infected with other species
(Table
1). However, there was no increase in the severity of
diarrheal symptoms in children who were coinfected with rotavirus,
Shigella flexneri,
Vibrio cholerae, and
Giardia. Diarrhea associated
with subgenotype Ia, the most commonly identified subgenotype,
was not more severe than that associated with the other subgenotypes
(
P = 0.77). In the five children with repeated episodes of cryptosporidial
diarrhea, the severity of diarrhea was increased in one case,
decreased in two cases, and remained the same in the remaining
two children during the second episode.
GIS analysis.
There were two significant space-time clusters of cryptosporidial
diarrhea, one during February to March 2005 and the other during
June to August 2003. The most likely space-time cluster involved
six cases within a 0.07-km radius during the time frame of 1
February 2005 to 31 March 2005 (relative risk [RR], 133.8;
P = 0.002). The second likely cluster involved eight cases during
the time frame of 1 June 2003 to 31 August 2003 (RR, 22.9;
P = 0.002). The calendar time distribution of cryptosporidial
diarrhea during the follow-up period relative to the total diarrheal
episodes experienced by the cohort also showed a peak in February
2005, with 16% of all diarrheal episodes in that month associated
with
Cryptosporidium spp. When children infected with
C. hominis subgenotype Ia alone were analyzed, a similar pattern was found,
in which the most likely space-time cluster involved eight cases
that occurred within an area of 0.26 km radius during the same
time period (RR, 48.9;
P = 0.001), and the second most likely
cluster involved six cases that occurred during 1 June 2003
to 31 August 2003 (RR, 62.4;
P = 0.001) (Fig.
3). There was
no clustering when the other subtypes were analyzed. Based on
data collected during twice-weekly visits, we found that the
cases belonged to different communities and that the children
attended different schools, so we have no reason to suspect
person-to-person transmission. No clustering was seen with the
seven children with
C. parvum infection. In order to identify
potential zoonotic transmission of infection, the households
and those of neighbors of the children with
C. parvum and
C. felis infections were questioned for the presence of cattle
or domestic pets, but no history of exposure to these animals
was found.
The association between cryptosporidial diarrhea and the water
source was also studied. In the community, five different overhead
tanks supplied water to different areas. The tank-specific infection
rates revealed that 7 of the 27 households which were supplied
by a particular tank (tank 1) had cases of
C. hominis Ia infection,
which was a significantly higher rate than in areas supplied
by the other tanks (chi-square test,
P = 0.001). There was also
a tank (tank 2) that was associated with only one episode of
cryptosporidial diarrhea. Water samples from the area were tested
for coliforms, and the most probable number/ml (MPN) was assessed.
Of the three samples collected from the Kaspa region during
January to March 2005, two had an MPN of >360, indicating
a very high level of contamination that suggested a possible
water-related transmission for this cluster. The technology
and reagents for testing water samples for cryptosporidial oocysts
are not readily available in India, and this test was not carried
out.

DISCUSSION
This is the first study to genetically characterize
Cryptosporidium spp. identified in children in a community setting in India
and to compare the association of species and subgenotype with
clinical features, and it is also the first study to carry out
spatial and temporal analyses of cryptosporidial diarrhea in
India.
Compared to our previous, hospital-based study of Cryptosporidium spp. from HIV-infected adults in the same area (19), there were significant differences between the proportions of potentially zoonotic species in the two populations (chi-square test, P < 0.001), with fewer zoonotic species found in children in the community than in HIV-infected adults in the hospital. The Cpgp40/15 subgenotypes were also more diverse among the HIV-infected adults than among the children. The predominant subgenotypes among the C. hominis samples were Ib and If in HIV-infected adults, whereas Ia predominated in children. All C. parvum samples from children were Ic at the Cpgp40/15 locus, whereas several different subgenotypes, including IIa, IIb, and Ic, were seen in C. parvum samples from HIV-infected adults. These data suggest differences in transmission patterns or susceptibility to disease in these two populations, which merits further study of potential sources of infection in a developing country. In a previous report, a probability proportional to size cluster survey of approximately 3,000 samples from individuals in the 15- to 40-year-old age group was carried out to estimate the community prevalence of antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus in rural and urban Vellore. This study showed that the prevalence of antibodies to HIV in the population was 0.66% (9). The program to prevent HIV transmission from parents to children has been in place since 2000, with all HIV-infected pregnant women throughout the state receiving antiretroviral therapy (http://www.unicef.org/india/hiv_aids_278.htm). Even in the absence of such a program, expected rates in children, who could possibly have had vertical transmission of infection, would be less than one-third of that in the adult population, or 0.22% in children or 1 child in the cohort of 452 recruited. Therefore, we do not believe that immunosuppression due to HIV could have been a significant risk factor for cryptosporidiosis in the 53 infected children or for recurrent diarrhea in the cohort.
Data for subgenotype distribution are scarce and are derived mainly from hospital-based studies and from outbreaks (2-4, 19); this is the first community-based study to subgenotype cryptosporidial samples in a developing country. This is also the first nonoutbreak study to show the predominance of one subgenotype, Ia, in the community. A previous study from Malawi involving community-acquired diarrhea in children showed the presence of six different subtypes among C. hominis samples (21). In the present study, diarrhea due to C. hominis infection was also found to be more severe than diarrhea due to other species in this community. A study from Peru reported longer periods of oocyst shedding in C. hominis-infected patients (33), but there has been no previous report of association with the severity of diarrhea.
The C. parvum samples were all subgenotype Ic, a subgenotype associated with anthroponotic transmission (35). In children infected with this species, no potential sources of zoonotic transmission were found. The finding that all C. parvum samples subgenotyped as Ic at the Cpgp40/15 locus, suggesting discordant alleles at the SSU rRNA locus, has been reported previously (14, 19, 21); and it has been suggested that this allele should be renamed IIc. These data collectively suggest a predominantly anthroponotic transmission cycle of Cryptosporidium spp. in this community, although the sources of infection were not conclusively determined.
The application of spatial and temporal analyses revealed two significant clusters of infections due to subgenotype Ia in children, which had not been identified with routine surveillance. Previous studies involving GIS and Cryptosporidium spp. have focused on the epidemiology of sporadic cases of cryptosporidiosis in the northwest of England and Wales (7) and have demonstrated contamination sites in watershed environments in Kenya and Ecuador (10). The present study is the first to apply GIS technology to document the epidemiology of cryptosporidiosis in a well-defined community where the disease is endemic. Additionally, an area of the community supplied with water from a particular overhead tank (tank 1) was found to have a significantly higher incidence of cryptosporidiosis. In the area where one cluster of cases was identified by GIS technology, very high levels of fecal contamination of water samples were detected at the same time point and suggest the possibility of waterborne transmission. However, a conclusive demonstration of this requires the identification of oocysts of the same subgenotype in the source water. Previous studies of waterborne outbreaks have found an association with C. hominis subgenotype Ib (2, 4, 37). In contrast, the subgenotype seen in the children who potentially acquired cryptosporidiosis from tank 1 was Ia. Only 1 of the 47 C. hominis samples subgenotyped in this study was Ib, suggesting that waterborne transmission of subgenotype Ib may not be a significant mode of acquisition of disease in this area and that there may be a geographic variation in genotypes associated with waterborne transmission. Alternatively, it is possible that subgenotype Ib is less prevalent in India than in other transmission sites due to other as-yet-undefined reasons.
These data provide new evidence to support the need for the use of molecular and geospatial tools to investigate potential sources of infection and to study transmission patterns in the community in order to apply relevant interventional measures for the prevention of disease.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by a Fogarty International Research
Cooperative Agreement and by grant 5R03TW2711 from the National
Institutes of Health. The sample and data collection were supported
by the Wellcome Trust Trilateral Initiative on Infectious Disease,
grant no. 063144.
None of the authors has any financial interest in any commercial company represented in this study, nor any other potential conflicts of interest.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Gastrointestinal Sciences, Christian Medical College, Vellore 632 004, India. Phone: 91-416-2282052. Fax: 91-416-2232035. E-mail:
gkang{at}cmcvellore.ac.in.

Published ahead of print on 24 January 2007. 

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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, March 2007, p. 915-920, Vol. 45, No. 3
0095-1137/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.01590-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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