Mindra Godwin, Wortham Jonathan M, Haddad Maryam B, Powell Krista M
1 Division of Tuberculosis Elimination, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.
2 Epidemic Intelligence Service, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Public Health Rep. 2017 Mar/Apr;132(2):157-163. doi: 10.1177/0033354916688270. Epub 2017 Feb 1.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provides on-site epidemiologic assistance for outbreak response when the health capacity of state, tribal, local, and territorial health departments has been exceeded. We examined recent outbreaks of tuberculosis (TB) for which health departments needed assistance.
We defined a TB outbreak as detection of ≥3 TB cases related by transmission, as suggested by routine genotyping and epidemiologic linkages. We conducted retrospective reviews of documentation from all 21 TB outbreak investigations in the United States for which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provided on-site assistance during 2009-2015. We abstracted data on patients' demographic characteristics and TB risk factors, as well as factors contributing to the outbreak from trip reports written by on-site investigators, and we compared these with outbreaks investigated during 2002-2008.
The 21 TB outbreaks during 2009-2015 involved 457 outbreak patients (range, 3-99 patients per outbreak). Of the 21 outbreaks, 16 were first identified through genotype data. In sum, 118 (26%) patients were identified through contact investigations of other patients in the outbreak. Most outbreak patients (n = 363, 79%) were US born. Ninety-two (26%) patients had a mental illness, 204 (45%) had been homeless in the year before diagnosis, and 379 (83%) used alcohol excessively or used illicit substances. The proportion of patients experiencing homelessness doubled between 2002-2008 and 2009-2015; other characteristics were similar between the 2 periods. Delayed TB diagnosis contributed to unmitigated transmission in all but 1 outbreak.
TB outbreaks challenge frontline public health resources. Genotyping and contact investigations are important strategies for detecting and controlling TB outbreaks, particularly among people experiencing homelessness or those with mental illness.
当州、部落、地方和属地卫生部门的卫生能力不堪重负时,疾病控制与预防中心会为疫情应对提供现场流行病学援助。我们调查了近期卫生部门需要援助的结核病(TB)疫情。
按照常规基因分型和流行病学关联所提示的,我们将结核病疫情定义为检测到≥3例有传播关联的结核病病例。我们对美国2009 - 2015年期间疾病控制与预防中心提供现场援助的所有21起结核病疫情调查的文档进行了回顾性审查。我们从现场调查人员撰写的行程报告中提取了患者的人口统计学特征和结核病风险因素数据,以及导致疫情爆发的因素,并将这些与2002 - 2008年期间调查的疫情进行了比较。
2009 - 2015年期间的21起结核病疫情涉及457例疫情患者(每起疫情患者数范围为3 - 99例)。在这21起疫情中,16起是通过基因分型数据首次发现的。总体而言,118例(26%)患者是通过对疫情中其他患者的接触调查发现的。大多数疫情患者(n = 363,79%)出生在美国。92例(26%)患者患有精神疾病,204例(45%)在诊断前一年无家可归,379例(83%)过度饮酒或使用非法药物。2002 - 2008年至2009 - 2015年期间,无家可归患者的比例翻了一番;两个时期的其他特征相似。除1起疫情外,结核病诊断延迟导致了传播未得到缓解。
结核病疫情对一线公共卫生资源构成挑战。基因分型和接触调查是检测和控制结核病疫情的重要策略,特别是在无家可归者或患有精神疾病的人群中。