Department of Rheumatology, Basel University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland; Department of Medicine and Diagnostics, Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, Switzerland.
J Travel Med. 2015 May-Jun;22(3):161-7. doi: 10.1111/jtm.12184. Epub 2014 Dec 22.
Patients with immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMIDs) increasingly benefit from improved health due to new therapeutic regimens allowing increasing numbers of such patients to travel overseas. This study aims to assess the proportion of IMID travelers seeking advice at the Travel Clinic of the University of Zurich, Switzerland, and to determine whether demographics, travel, and vaccination patterns differ between IMID- and non-IMID travelers.
Pre-travel visits and differences between IMID- and non-IMID travelers were assessed; logistic regression was used to adjust for confounders.
Among 22,584 travelers who visited the Zurich Travel Clinic in a 25-month period, 1.8% suffered from an IMID, with gastroenterological and rheumatic conditions being the most common; 34.2% were using immunosuppressive or immunomodulatory medication. The reasons for travel and the destinations did not differ between IMID- and non-IMID travelers, Thailand and India being the most common destinations. IMID travelers stayed less often for longer than 1 month abroad and traveled less frequently on a low budget. Inactivated vaccines were similarly administered to both groups, while live vaccines were given half as often to IMID travelers.
The increasing numbers of IMID patients, many using immunosuppressive or immunomodulatory therapy, show similar travel patterns as non-IMID travelers. Thus, they are exposed to the same travel health risks, vaccine-preventable infections being one among them. Particularly, in view of the fact that live attenuated vaccines are less often administered to IMID patients more data are needed on the safety and immunogenicity of vaccines and on travel-specific risks to be able to offer evidence-based pre-travel health advice.
由于新的治疗方案使越来越多的免疫介导性炎症性疾病(IMID)患者受益,从而提高了他们的健康水平,因此越来越多的此类患者选择出国旅行。本研究旨在评估在瑞士苏黎世大学旅行诊所寻求咨询的 IMID 旅行者的比例,并确定 IMID 旅行者和非 IMID 旅行者在人口统计学、旅行和疫苗接种模式方面是否存在差异。
评估了旅行前就诊情况以及 IMID 旅行者和非 IMID 旅行者之间的差异;采用逻辑回归来调整混杂因素。
在 25 个月的时间里,有 22584 名旅行者前往苏黎世旅行诊所就诊,其中 1.8%患有 IMID,最常见的是胃肠道和风湿性疾病;34.2%正在使用免疫抑制或免疫调节药物。IMID 旅行者和非 IMID 旅行者的旅行原因和目的地并无差异,泰国和印度是最常见的目的地。IMID 旅行者在国外停留的时间往往较短,且不太频繁地进行低预算旅行。两组旅行者都同样接种了灭活疫苗,而 IMID 旅行者接种活疫苗的频率则减半。
越来越多的 IMID 患者,其中许多人正在接受免疫抑制或免疫调节治疗,其旅行模式与非 IMID 旅行者相似。因此,他们面临着相同的旅行健康风险,疫苗可预防的感染就是其中之一。特别是,鉴于活减毒疫苗较少用于 IMID 患者,因此需要更多关于疫苗安全性和免疫原性以及旅行特定风险的数据,以便能够提供基于证据的旅行前健康建议。