During the spring of 1993 an estimated 403000 residents of the
greater Milwaukee, Wisconsin
area experienced gastrointestinal illness due to infection with the
parasite Cryptosporidium
parvum following contamination of the city's water supply. To
define the clinical, laboratory
and epidemiologic features of outbreak-associated cryptosporidiosis in
children, medical and
laboratory records for all children submitting stool samples to the
microbiology laboratory of
the Children's Hospital of Wisconsin between 7 April and 13 May 1993
were reviewed retrospectively. Interviews with parents were also conducted to obtain
additional clinical
history. Cryptosporidium, as the sole pathogen, was identified
in stools from 49 (23%) of the
209 children enrolled in the study. Children with laboratory-confirmed
cryptosporidiosis were
more likely to live in areas of Milwaukee supplied with contaminated water
(RR=1·92,
CI=1·19–3·09), to be tested later in their illness
(P<0·05), to have submitted more than one
stool specimen (P=0·01), to have an underlying disease that
altered their immune status
(RR=2·78, CI=1·60–4·84), and to be older than
1 year of age (RR=2·02, CI=1·13–3·60).
Clinical illness in these patients was more prolonged and associated
with weight loss and
abdominal cramps compared with Cryptosporidium-negative children.
In the context of this
massive waterborne outbreak relatively few children had documented infection with
Cryptosporidium. If many children who tested negative for
the parasite were truly infected, as
the epidemiologic data suggest, existing laboratory tests for
Cryptosporidium were insensitive,
particularly early in the course of illness.