INTRODUCTION
Q fever is a zoonosis caused by the bacterium Coxiella burnetii. In 2007, Herpen, a small village in the south of The Netherlands was heavily affected by a Q fever outbreak [Reference Karagiannis1]. This outbreak was followed by larger outbreaks in 2008 and 2009, in a larger geographical area and culminated in 4107 notifications nationwide by 2010 [2].
A common sequel of acute Q fever is protracted incapacitating fatigue [Reference van Loenhout3–Reference Limonard5], often denoted as Q fever fatigue syndrome (QFS) that may continue for ⩾10 years [Reference Wildman6, Reference Ayres7]. Patients with QFS may experience severe sweating, breathlessness, blurred vision, reduced exertion, myalgia, arthralgia, sleeping disorders and mood swings [Reference Ayres7, Reference Hatchette8], symptoms that resemble chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). The aetiology of QFS is not entirely understood. Dysregulation of cytokines due to persisting antigens of C. burnetii are described as causing chronic stimulation of the immune system [Reference Penttila9, Reference Arashima10]. A post-infection fatigue syndrome (PIFS) [Reference Marmion11] may also occur after other infections [Reference Hickie12], such as Borrelia burgdorferi [Reference Marques13], Legionella pneumophila [Reference van Loenhout14], Epstein–Barr virus and Ross River virus infections [Reference Hickie12]. According to several studies, Q fever patients have an impaired health status, pulmonary disorders and an increased risk of problems in general and social functioning [Reference van Loenhout3–Reference Hatchette8, Reference Hickie12, Reference van Loenhout14].
General practitioners (GPs) and the population in the Q fever affected area, and the national Q fever patient organization, speculated that the number of infections and long-term consequences such as fatigue were underestimated. The local municipal health service (MHS) therefore initiated the ‘Q-Herpen-II’ study in – this small rural village with a stable Caucasian population – in order to investigate the presence of antibodies against C. burnetii in relation to the health status with an emphasis on fatigue.
METHODS
Study design and study population
The Municipal Health Service (MHS) ‘GGD Hart voor Brabant’ executed this study as part of the larger Q-Herpen-II study. The Medical Ethics Review Committee of Utrecht University Medical Centre, approved the study (protocol 13-367/D Q-Herpen II). For this cross-sectional population study all adult inhabitants (aged ⩾18 years) in the village of Herpen (postal code 5373) were invited to participate. The municipal administration provided demographic data for the 2161 inhabitants. In January 2014, all were sent a letter by mail containing information on the study with a participation request, a questionnaire and an informed consent form. The questionnaire included questions on demographics, smoking, the participant's knowledge or perception of their Q fever status, risk factors associated with chronic Q fever, Q fever vaccination status, chronic medical conditions and medication use.
The current health status was assessed with the Nijmegen Clinical Screening Instrument (NCSI), which is a validated method originally developed to measure the health status of COPD patients in a clinical setting [Reference Peters15]. The instrument consists of the main domains: symptoms, functional impairment, and quality of life. These are divided into eight subdomains (Table 1). Patients' scores are subdivided into ‘normal’, ‘mild problems’ and ‘clinically relevant problems’. The only exception is the subdomain general quality of life (GQOL) that is divided into ‘normal’ and ‘clinically relevant problems’/‘severe problems’. In the univariate and multivariate analysis, the NCSI categories mild problems and clinically relevant problems were combined into one category designated ‘problems’. Age, smoking behaviour, and educational level were dichotomized.
PARS-D, Physical Activity Rating Scale – dyspnoea; DEQ, Dyspnoea Emotions Questionnaire; CIS, Checklist Individual Strength; SIP, Sickness Impact Profile; QoL-RiQ, Quality of Life for Respiratory Illness Questionnaire, BDI, Beck Depression Inventory.
During 5 days in February and 1 day in March 2014, questionnaires were handed in by participants and checked for missing information and errors by medical staff together with the participant. This was followed by venepuncture.
Antibodies against C. burnetii were determined with the indirect fluorescence antibody assay (IFA). An IFA IgG phase I or II titre ⩾1:64 was considered positive. The IFA results were reported to participants and their GPs with a medical recommendation. Data on the occurrence of chronic Q fever are described in a separate publication [Reference Morroy16].
We verified if participants had been notified previously, by using the local MHS data. In The Netherlands acute Q fever is notifiable. Any acute Q fever diagnosis must be reported to the MHS both by the clinician and the laboratory of medical microbiology. Reported cases that according to the MHS meet the predefined national case definition are notified and registered in a national surveillance system. Notification criteria used at the beginning of the outbreak in 2007 were: a laboratory confirmation and matching clinical symptoms. In July 2008 the Dutch Q fever notification criteria were changed to: the presence of fever, pneumonia or hepatitis and a laboratory diagnosis plus a report to the MHS within 90 days following the onset of illness. For notification at least one of the following laboratory criteria should be met: seroconversion or a ⩾fourfold C. burnetii IgG antibody titre increase in paired sera (minimally 2 weeks apart) of an IFA or a complement fixation test (CFT), or presence of IgM phase II antibodies or a positive C. burnetii PCR (unless the sample is from a patient with chronic Q fever). If any of the clinical, laboratory or time criteria were not met a Q fever case would, although reported, not be registered (notified) in the national surveillance system.
We assumed that IFA-positive (IgG phase I or II ⩾1:64) participants who reported that they did not to recall an acute Q fever episode, had either previously experienced an asymptomatic or mild acute infection that had not been medically evaluated. These individuals were classified as ‘no recollection of a previous infection’. Participants that were adamant that they had been infected and reported their belief as a past infection even if this was without evidence of any medical proof were classified as ‘belief in a previous infection’. We conducted a stratified analysis, using the Mantel–Haenzel Summary χ 2 test, to control for the confounding effect of knowledge of/belief of a past episode of acute Q fever. It is therefore not a multivariate statistical model.
Statistical analysis
Questionnaires were digitally scanned into a SPSS database and analysed with SPSS v. 21.0 (SPSS Inc., USA) and Open Epi (http://www.openepi.com/Menu/OE_Menu.htm). Information on age and gender of non-participants was obtained from the municipal administration.
Participants that had been vaccinated against Q fever were excluded from the analysis.
Proportions were compared with the χ 2 test. Multivariate logistic regression analyses was used to compare the NCSI subdomain scores incorporating 2014 IFA status, age, gender, smoking, educational level, rheumatoid arthritis, psychiatric disorders and/or use of psychiatric medication, and other co-morbidity. A P value <0·05 was considered significant.
RESULTS
Participants and non-participants
Of the 2161 inhabitants, 70·9% (1534/2161) participated. Both a blood sample and a questionnaire were received from 70·2% (1517/2161) participants.
Participants and non-participants were comparable with respect to gender and age (data not shown).
Characteristics and IFA status of participants
Of the participants 33·8% (n = 513) were IFA positive. As the five participants vaccinated against Q fever were removed from our database, data were analysed for the remaining 1512 participants, including 510 IFA positives.
There were no differences in gender, age, educational level and presence of co-morbidity between IFA-positive and IFA-negative participants (Table 2). IFA-positive participants were more often current smokers than IFA-negative participants (Table 2). Of note, of the 147 participants who were IFA positive in 2007, 25 (17%) seroreverted and were IFA negative in 2014 [Reference Morroy16].
* Analysed with the independent sample t test or † Pearson's χ 2 test.
‡ The actual P value is 0·054.
NCSI subdomains in relation to IFA status
IFA-positive participants did not score significantly higher (worse) on NSCI subdomains compared to IFA-negative participants (Fig. 1, for data see Supplementary Table S1). By contrast, in IFA-positive participants, the odds ratios (ORs) for the three subdomains; subjective pulmonary complaints [OR 0·69, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0·55–0·88, P < 0·01], dyspnoea emotions (OR 0·65, 95% CI 0·49-0·85, P < 0·01) and subjective impairment (OR 0·77, 95% CI 0·59–0·98, P = 0·04) were <1.
A positive IFA status was not an independent risk factors for fatigue in the multivariate model but being aged <50 years, a current smoker, and having an underlying medical condition (co-morbidity) were (Table 3). See Table 4 for the independent risk factors for GQOL.
OR, Odds ratio; CI, confidence interval.
† Fatigue is divided into normal vs. the combination of mild and clinically relevant fatigue scores, here designated fatigued or abnormal fatigue score.
‡ Reference group.
The actual P value is * 0·053 and ** 0·054.
* GQOL is divided into normal vs. clinically relevant abnormal GQOL.
† Is the reference group.
Regardless of IFA status 37·7% of participants reported fatigue including 22·6% with clinically relevant fatigue. Participants with chronic medical conditions such as psychiatric disorders had both a severely impaired GQOL and fatigue in 64·0% and 48·0% of cases, respectively. While 35·4% of participants with rheumatoid arthritis had a severely impaired GQOL, for fatigue this figure was 36·9%.
When using the IFA titre as a semi-quantitative measure, participants with a higher IFA titre did not report more fatigue than those with a lower IFA titre (data not shown).
Notification in relation to the subdomains fatigue and GQOL
Of the 510 IFA-positive participants, 51 had previously been notified for acute Q fever, 49 of whom completed the subdomain fatigue part of the questionnaire. These notified participants presented mild and clinically relevant fatigue (63·3%, n = 31/49) significantly more often (Table 5) than IFA-positive participants with a known positive Q fever status, who had not fitted the notification criteria combined with those who were first identified during this study (33·3%, n = 150/451, OR 3·4, 95% CI 1·9–6·5, P < 0·01). These notified and non-notified IFA-positive participants did not differ significantly for the subdomain GQOL.
Belief in a previous Q fever infection in relation to fatigue
The questionnaire contained several questions about perceived or medically confirmed acute Q fever. Of the 181 participants that reported a medically confirmed diagnosis or believed that they had suffered from acute Q fever, 137 (76%) were IFA positive in 2014 (Supplementary Table S2). We assumed that IFA-positive participants who did not recall an acute Q fever episode had previously experienced an asymptomatic acute infection, or mild illness that had not been medically evaluated. A stratified analysis showed no evidence of confounding by belief in a past Q fever episode in the relationship between IFA status and fatigue (Supplementary Table S2).
DISCUSSION
In this unique, large cross-sectional population study in a Q fever high-incidence village, 7 years after a large Q fever outbreak, we found a high seroprevalence (34%) of C. burnetii antibodies. An impaired GQOL or abnormal fatigue status, was not associated with C. burnetii IFA-positive serological test results. Overall, 37·7% of participants reported fatigue including 22·6% with clinically relevant fatigue. In the nearby city of Nijmegen, a study in 2009 found that more than 30% of a random population sample suffered from fatigue for >6 months [Reference van't Leven17]. A German study, also reported that 30% of participants from a general population sample reported moderate fatigue during the last 6 months while 10% of participants had substantial fatigue for the last ⩾6 months [Reference Kocalevent18]. These two studies clearly indicate that fatigue levels in the general population are high. The reported 37·7% prevalence figure for fatigue in our study seems large, but compared to the above-mentioned figure of 30% it is not. As these two studies used different instruments to assess fatigue, only a rough comparison of the prevalence of fatigue is possible.
GQOL and fatigue were, in this study, severely impaired in participants with chronic medical conditions such as psychiatric disorders and rheumatoid arthritis. The influence of chronic medical conditions on fatigue has been reported previously for psychiatric disorders [Reference Beard, Weisberg and Keller19–Reference Nierenberg21], rheumatoid arthritis [Reference Garip, Eser and Bodur22], diabetes [Reference Glasgow23], and heart failure [Reference Juenger24, Reference Mendes de Leon25].
Studies in The Netherlands and elsewhere clearly document persisting fatigue and an impaired quality of life after Q fever. These studies focused on proven acute Q fever episodes, i.e. patients with clinical disease and with a confirmed laboratory diagnosis that often fitted the national notification criteria (symptomatic cases) [Reference van Loenhout3, Reference Morroy4, Reference Marmion11, Reference van Loenhout14, Reference van Loenhout26]. Our findings are in line with the international literature, as we also documented persisting fatigue in the small group of 49 previously notified participants. However, in this community-based study we found no increased risk for an impaired health status or fatigue in participants with C.burnetii antibodies. Nor could we find a relationship between the fatigue level and IFA titre. This finding was similar to data from Hussain-Yusuf et al. [Reference Hussain-Yusuf27] who also found no detectable relationship between fatigue levels and serology 6 years after exposure.
The present study and other studies support the notion that the severity of symptoms during the acute episode predicts long-term symptoms such as fatigue [Reference Morroy4, Reference Hickie12] and that QFS follows clinically overt infections, but rarely that of a subclinical infection [Reference Marmion28]. While the severity of the infection during the acute phase (here notification) was related to the intensity of the later PIFS, psychological and microbiological factors were not.
The majority of participants with a positive IFA result had never been notified for acute Q fever, presumably because the acute infection episode had passed with only mild clinical symptoms or was entirely asymptomatic.
A previous study from The Netherlands reported no significant difference in the NCSI subdomain scores between asymptomatic cases infected with C. burnetii (n = 11) and healthy controls (n = 23) [Reference Limonard5]. Although that study's sample size was small its results are in accordance with our findings.
A comparison between patients with a lower respiratory tract infection of several causes (n = 32) and those with Q fever (n = 50) showed no significant differences for most NCSI subdomains (including fatigue and GQOL approximately 15 months after the initial infection [Reference van Dam29]. Twelve months after the onset of symptoms 50% vs. 42·6% of patients with a Legionella infection had severe fatigue and GQOL, respectively (measured with the NCSI) [Reference van Loenhout14]. However, notified (and therefore symptomatic) Q fever patients scored worse for severe fatigue and GQOL with 60·2% and 50·0%, respectively, compared to those with a Legionella infection [Reference van Loenhout14].
We were unable to verify the severity of any acute illness episode with certainty because the acute episode could have taken place years ago. We speculated that participants who believed that they had suffered from an acute Q fever episode in the past would report current fatigue more often. We also expected to find that people with fatigue in communities affected by Q fever would attribute their fatigue to a previous Q fever episode, even when acute Q fever was not medically diagnosed. However, our analysis showed that this factor was not significant and could be disregarded.
From historical data we know that 17% of participants from this population that were IFA seropositive in 2007, had become seronegative by 2014 [Reference Morroy16]. This shows that negative Q fever serology does not rule out a previous C. burnetii infection which should be taken into account if high-risk populations are vaccinated against Q fever. This also shows that Q fever serology is insufficient to diagnose whether long-term fatigue might been caused by Q fever.
The major strengths of this study are the high response rate of 70·9%, a questionnaire check before venepuncture and the inclusion of participants from the same homogenous village with a high Q fever prevalence. This is the first large study to compare IFA-positive and IFA-negative cases from the same homogenous population. The whole spectrum from initially asymptomatic, mildly symptomatic and severe symptoms during an acute Q fever infection is included. Furthermore, the control groups used in many other studies were often healthier than the general population as only individuals without known co-morbidities were selected [Reference van Loenhout3, Reference Morroy4, Reference van Loenhout14]. Our control group included participants with co-morbidities and is therefore a realistic representation of the general population. Together this results in unique and robust data.
Another strength is that by using a validated instrument, i.e. the NCSI, we can compare our data with other studies that used this instrument.
Lower and higher [Reference Vranakis30] IFA cut-off values are internationally used for screening. Lacking an international standard we used the IFA value 1:64 that is commonly used in The Netherlands.
Another limitation of the study is that the fatigue status of participants before the outbreak is unknown, thus participants might already have been fatigued for other reasons before the outbreak took place. The use of a self-reporting questionnaire is also a limitation. Even though questionnaires were checked for missing information or errors by medical and paramedical staff, it was not possible to entirely avoid missing information. A non-quantifiable recall bias is likely to have occurred for the following two reasons: perceived acute Q fever episodes were reported with a time lag of 4–7 years [Reference Coughlin31]. Furthermore, cross-sectional study designs with retrospective components have in general a higher risk of recall bias [Reference Raphael32]. An acute illness in the past could also have been erroneously reported by a participant as Q fever regardless of the cause.
CONCLUSIONS
Seven years after the start of the Q fever epidemic in The Netherlands, the prevalence of antibodies against C. burnetii in the adult population of an affected village was still 34%. A large proportion of the population reported an impaired health status with fatigue. However, there were no differences between those with and those without antibodies against C. burnetii for fatigue and other health status parameters.
Participants who had been notified for clinically apparent acute Q fever, reported twice as much fatigue compared to those who had serological evidence of a past infection but who had previously not been notified because they did not fulfil the notification criteria or because they had experienced a mild or asymptomatic infection.
There are many reasons for fatigue and in some cases a Q fever episode can be an attributing or causative factor. Even though some individuals developed fatigue after a C. burnetii infection the majority of individuals became fatigued due to other and often unknown reasons.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL
For supplementary material accompanying this paper visit http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0950268815002472.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We thank the following groups and individuals who supported this study and assisted with its conception: Michel van den Berg, chairperson of Q-uestion, the national Q fever patient organization; Anja Garritsen, CEO of InnatOss Laboratories BV, Alphons Olde Loohuis, general practitioner in Herpen; and Clementine Wijkmans, medical consultant Communicable Disease Control at the MHS Hart voor Brabant. The above-mentioned individuals were part of the advisory board or the feedback group. Teske Schoffelen from the Radboudumc provided information concerning Q fever vaccination. We are grateful to the volunteers who assisted during the sampling days and the participants who made this study possible.
Financial support was provided by the Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport (VWS) project no. 321632. The cost of IFA tests by the Laboratory of Medical Microbiology of the Jeroen Bosch Hospital and the provision of personnel by the Municipal Health Service were reduced.
DECLARATION OF INTEREST
None.