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pdfPrint Date: 8/31/23
Title:
Enhanced public health surveillance for cyclosporiasis in the United States
Project Id:
0900f3eb821e6c67
Accession #:
CGH-ET-8/15/23-e6c67
Project Contact:
Anne Straily
Organization:
CGH/DPDM/PDB/ET
Status:
Project In Progress
Intended Use:
Project Determination
Estimated Start Date:
08/28/2023
Estimated Completion Date:
09/30/2026
CDC/ATSDR HRPO/IRB Protocol #:
0920-1198
OMB Control #:
Determinations
Determination
Justification
HSC:
Does NOT Require HRPO
Review
Not Research - Public Health Surveillance
PRA:
PRA Applies
Completed
Entered By & Role
8/22/23
Abel_Jason A. (jza5) CIO HSC
8/31/23
Abel_Jason A. (jza5) OMB / PRA
45 CFR 46.102(l)(2)
ICRO:
PRA Applies
OMB Approval date: 9/30/20
OMB Expiration date: 9/30/23
8/31/23
Zirger_Jeffrey (wtj5) ICRO Reviewer
Description & Funding
Description
Priority:
Standard
Date Needed:
08/28/2023
Determination Start Date:
08/15/23
Description:
Cyclosporiasis is a nationally notifiable diseases in the United States. In jurisdictions where cyclosporiasis is reportable, healthcare
providers and laboratories are required to report cases of illness to their state or local health department. The Cyclosporiasis
National Hypothesis Generating Questionnaire (CNHGQ) is used by health officials at the state or local health department to
interview patients with reported cases of cyclosporiasis and collects clinical and travel history, produce consumption, and restaurant
and grocery store exposures. Health departments notify CDC of cases of nationally notifiable and reportable diseases so that CDC
may compile national-level data for the United States. CDC uses this data to monitor, measure, and alert healthcare providers,
public health partners, and the public to outbreaks and other public health threats and collaborates with the US Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) to conduct traceback investigations for implicated food vehicles. This protocol does not describe a specific
study, rather it describes the receipt and use of cyclosporiasis surveillance data by epidemiologists at CDC that was collected using
the CDC-designed CNHGQ.
IMS/CIO/Epi-Aid/Lab-Aid/Chemical Exposure
Submission:
No
IMS Activation Name:
Not selected
Primary Priority of the Project:
Not selected
Secondary Priority(s) of the Project:
Not selected
Task Force Associated with the Response:
Not selected
CIO Emergency Response Name:
Not selected
Epi-Aid Name:
Not selected
Lab-Aid Name:
Not selected
Assessment of Chemical Exposure Name:
Not selected
Goals/Purpose
: Cyclosporiasis is a nationally notifiable diseases in the United States. In jurisdictions where cyclosporiasis is reportable, healthcare
providers and laboratories are required to report cases of illness to their state or local health department. The Cyclosporiasis
National Hypothesis Generating Questionnaire (CNHGQ) is used by health officials at the state or local health department to
interview patients with reported cases of cyclosporiasis and collects clinical and travel history, produce consumption, and restaurant
and grocery store exposures. Health departments notify CDC of cases of nationally notifiable and reportable diseases so that CDC
may compile national-level data for the United States. CDC uses this data to monitor, measure, and alert healthcare providers,
public health partners, and the public to outbreaks and other public health threats and collaborates with the US Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) to conduct traceback investigations for implicated food vehicles.
Objective:
Public health surveillance data collected about confirmed and probable cases of cyclosporiasis shows where and how often the
disease occurs in a particular area, who is affected (demographic, clinical, and epidemiological characteristics), how they are
affected (course of clinical illness and care received), and how they were potentially infected (produce consumption and restaurant
and grocery store exposures). This information enables state and local health officials and CDC to understand where cyclosporiasis
is occurring, how cyclosporiasis can be prevented, which groups are most heavily impacted, identify outbreaks, identify disease
trends and, work with partner agencies (e.g., FDA) and other external stakeholders to implement measures to mitigate and control
the spread of disease.
Does your project measure health disparities among No
populations/groups experiencing social, economic,
geographic, and/or environmental disadvantages?:
Does your project investigate underlying
contributors to health inequities among populations
/groups experiencing social, economic, geographic,
and/or environmental disadvantages?:
No
Does your project propose, implement, or evaluate
an action to move towards eliminating health
inequities?:
No
Activities or Tasks:
Programmatic Work
Target Populations to be Included/Represented:
General US Population
Tags/Keywords:
Cyclosporiasis ; Public Health Surveillance ; Foodborne Diseases
CDC's Role:
CDC employees or agents will obtain or use anonymous or unlinked data or biological specimens
Method Categories:
Outbreak Investigation; Surveillance Support
Methods:
Public health surveillance for cyclosporiasis is ongoing. In states where cyclosporiasis is reportable, cases of cyclosporiasis are
reported to the state or local health department. Participants (patients diagnosed with cyclosporiasis) are then interviewed at least
once by state or local public health officials, although follow up with patients involved in an outbreak or other public health
investigation may be necessary. State or local health officials may be contacted by CDC epidemiologists for additional information
depending on the course of the investigation; CDC staff do not contact or interview patients. Analysis of surveillance data collected
via the CNHGQ is also continual and includes both descriptive analyses and exploratory studies where exposure information is reanalyzed as new cases are reported to identify potentially emerging signals that may indicate a particular produce item or point of
sale/service as a source of illness. The study population are U.S. residents diagnosed with cyclosporiasis. The cyclosporiasis case
definition was determined by the Council for State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE). Cases are identified by electronic
laboratory reporting of positive test results to the state or local health department; physicians may also report cases to their state or
local health department. The number of cases reported will vary by location and over time. Patients diagnosed with cyclosporiasis
are interviewed by state or local public health officials in jurisdictions where the disease is reportable using the CNHGQ or a stateadapted version of it. That information is then transmitted to CDC electronically. CDC epidemiologists receive and compile reported
case data into a database using a specially designed R-shiny tool for further analysis. Key variables that are collected include
demographic, clinical and travel history, and exposure data. The data are analyzed continually, utilizing both descriptive and
exploratory methods to determine both national level disease estimates (e.g., case counts by year, state, sex, race/ethnicity, age)
and identify trends in disease occurrence. Data are stored electronically in a secured folder by disease with restricted access only
for staff working with and granted access to that data. Patients diagnosed with cyclosporiasis are assigned a unique case ID by their
state or local health department and this case ID is provided on data sent to CDC. Data are stored electronically in a secure folder
by disease with restricted access only for staff working with and granted access to the data. Electronic data are retained indefinitely.
Any paper forms received are entered into that disease#s electronic database and the paper copy destroyed.
Collection of Info, Data or Biospecimen:
Patients diagnosed with cyclosporiasis are interviewed by state or local public health officials in jurisdictions where the disease is
reportable using the CNHGQ or a state-adapted version of it. That information is then transmitted to CDC electronically.
Expected Use of Findings/Results and their impact:
Key variables that are collected include demographic, clinical and travel history, and exposure data. The data are analyzed
continually, utilizing both descriptive and exploratory methods to determine both national level disease estimates (e.g., case counts
by year, state, sex, race/ethnicity, age) and identify trends in disease occurrence. Surveillance data are compiled and shared or
discussed with state and local health departments depending on the needs of the jurisdiction or investigations that may be occurring
at the time. During the cyclosporiasis season (typically May through August, although cases can be reported as late as September),
a weekly epidemiological update is compiled and distributed via email to state and local health departments as well as FDA and
internal CDC partners (e.g., Division of Foodborne Waterborne and Environmental Diseases/Outbreak Response and Prevention
Branch). Surveillance data may be compiled and published as surveillance summaries or summaries of notable events.
Cyclosporiasis surveillance data may be combined with other data (e.g., Cyclospora genotyping data) to better understand the
occurrence of disease in the United States. Any of these analyses may be published in the scientific literature or presented at
scientific conferences.
Could Individuals potentially be identified based on
Information Collected?
No
Funding
Funding yet to be added .....
HSC Review
Regulation and Policy
Do you anticipate this project will need IRB review
by the CDC IRB, NIOSH IRB, or through reliance on
an external IRB?
Estimated number of study participants
No
Population - Children
Protocol Page #:
Population - Minors
Protocol Page #:
Population - Prisoners
Protocol Page #:
Population - Pregnant Women
Protocol Page #:
Population - Emancipated Minors
Protocol Page #:
Suggested level of risk to subjects
Do you anticipate this project will be exempt
research or non-exempt research
Requested consent process waviers
Informed consent for adults
No Selection
Children capable of providing assent
No Selection
Parental permission
No Selection
Alteration of authorization under HIPPA Privacy
Rule
No Selection
Requested Waivers of Documentation of Informed Consent
Informed consent for adults
No Selection
Children capable of providing assent
No Selection
Parental permission
No Selection
Consent process shown in an understandable language
Reading level has been estimated
No Selection
Comprehension tool is provided
No Selection
Short form is provided
No Selection
Translation planned or performed
No Selection
Certified translation / translator
No Selection
Translation and back-translation to/from target
language(s)
No Selection
Other method
No Selection
Clinical Trial
Involves human participants
No Selection
Assigned to an intervention
No Selection
Evaluate the effect of the intervention
No Selection
Evaluation of a health related biomedical or
behavioral outcome
No Selection
Registerable clinical trial
No Selection
Other Considerations
Exception is requested to PHS informing those
bested about HIV serostatus
No Selection
Human genetic testing is planned now or in the
future
No Selection
Involves long-term storage of identfiable biological
specimens
No Selection
Involves a drug, biologic, or device
No Selection
Conducted under an Investigational New Drug
exemption or Investigational Device Exemption
No Selection
Institutions & Staff
Institutions
Institutions yet to be added .....
Staff
Staff Member
SIQT Exp.
Date
Anne Straily
07/21/2026
Lauren Ahart
07/05/2026
CITI Biomedical
Exp. Date
CITI Social & Behavioral
Exp. Date
CITI Good Clinical Practice
Exp. Date
Staff Role
Email
Phone
Organization
06/02/2024
Principal
Investigator
yzv2@cdc.
gov
404-7181422
Epidemiology
Team
09/05/2025
Co-Investigator
nox7@cdc.
gov
404-7183207
Epidemiology
Team
Marion Rice
01/30/2026
12/10/2024
Susan
Montgomery
06/26/2026
06/24/2024
01/13/2026
Co-Investigator
lnv1@cdc.
gov
404-7186865
Epidemiology
Team
Program Lead
zqu6@cdc.
gov
404-7184731
Epidemiology
Team
Data
DMP
Proposed Data Collection Start Date:
8/28/23
Proposed Data Collection End Date:
9/30/26
Proposed Public Access Level:
Public
Public Access Justification:
Case surveillance data for nationally notifiable disease
How Access Will Be Provided for Data:
Data use agreement
Plans for Archival and Long Term Preservation:
Data will be stored electronically.
Spatiality
Spatiality (Geographic Locations) yet to be added .....
Dataset
Dataset
Title
Dataset
Description
Dataset yet to be added...
Data Publisher
/Owner
Public Access
Level
Public Access
Justification
External
Access URL
Download
URL
Type of Data
Released
Collection
Start Date
Collection End
Date
Supporting Info
Current
Date Added
Description
Supporting Info Type
Supporting Info
Zirger_Jeffrey
(wtj5)
ICRO Reviewer
08/31/2023
NOA 0920-1198 (2020)
Notice of Action
NOA 0920-1198_2020.pdf
Current
Straily_Anne
(yzv2)
Project Contact
08/30/2023
Updated protocol with correct OMB
control number.
Protocol
Protocol for CNHGQ_updated.docx
Current
Straily_Anne
(yzv2)
Project Contact
08/15/2023
CNHGQ
Data Collection Form
CNHGQ 2021_fillable.pdf
Current
Straily_Anne
(yzv2)
Project Contact
08/15/2023
OMB/PRA template form
Paperwork Reduction Act Form
OMB-PRA template for DPDM_CNHGQ renewal.docx
Straily_Anne
(yzv2)
Project Contact
08/15/2023
Protocol for collection and use of
surveillance data via CNHGQ
Protocol
Protocol for CNHGQ.docx
Straily_Anne
(yzv2)
Project Contact
08/15/2023
DPDM Project determination form
Other-Project determination form
338035-A_DPDM-Proj-Det-Form-4-508_Cyclo
Surveillance.pdf
Current
CDC Staff
Member and
Role
File Type | application/pdf |
File Modified | 2023-09-01 |
File Created | 2023-08-31 |