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2017年美国疟疾监测

Malaria Surveillance - United States, 2017.

作者信息

Mace Kimberly E, Lucchi Naomi W, Tan Kathrine R

机构信息

Malaria Branch, Division of Parasitic Diseases and Malaria, Center for Global Health, CDC.

出版信息

MMWR Surveill Summ. 2021 Mar 19;70(2):1-35. doi: 10.15585/mmwr.ss7002a1.

Abstract

PROBLEM/CONDITION: Malaria in humans is caused by intraerythrocytic protozoa of the genus Plasmodium. These parasites are transmitted by the bite of an infective female Anopheles species mosquito. The majority of malaria infections in the United States occur among persons who have traveled to regions with ongoing malaria transmission. However, malaria is occasionally acquired by persons who have not traveled out of the country through exposure to infected blood products, congenital transmission, nosocomial exposure, or local mosquitoborne transmission. Malaria surveillance in the United States is conducted to provide information on its occurrence (e.g., temporal, geographic, and demographic), guide prevention and treatment recommendations for travelers and patients, and facilitate rapid transmission control measures if locally acquired cases are identified.

PERIOD COVERED

This report summarizes confirmed malaria cases in persons with onset of illness in 2017 and trends in previous years.

DESCRIPTION OF SYSTEM

Malaria cases diagnosed by blood film microscopy, polymerase chain reaction, or rapid diagnostic tests are reported to local and state health departments through electronic laboratory reports or by health care providers or laboratory staff members. Case investigations are conducted by local and state health departments, and reports are transmitted to CDC through the National Malaria Surveillance System (NMSS), the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS), or direct CDC consultations. CDC reference laboratories provide diagnostic assistance and conduct antimalarial drug resistance marker testing on blood samples submitted by health care providers or local or state health departments. This report summarizes data from the integration of all cases from NMSS and NNDSS, CDC reference laboratory reports, and CDC clinical consultations.

RESULTS

CDC received reports of 2,161 confirmed malaria cases with onset of symptoms in 2017, including two congenital cases, three cryptic cases, and two cases acquired through blood transfusion. The number of malaria cases diagnosed in the United States has been increasing since the mid-1970s; in 2017, the number of cases reported was the highest in 45 years, surpassing the previous peak of 2,078 confirmed cases reported in 2016. Of the cases in 2017, a total of 1,819 (86.1%) were imported cases that originated from Africa; 1,216 (66.9%) of these came from West Africa. The overall proportion of imported cases originating from West Africa was greater in 2017 (57.6%) than in 2016 (51.6%). Among all cases, P. falciparum accounted for the majority of infections (1,523 [70.5%]), followed by P. vivax (216 [10.0%]), P. ovale (119 [5.5%]), and P. malariae (55 [2.6%]). Infections by two or more species accounted for 22 cases (1.0%). The infecting species was not reported or was undetermined in 226 cases (10.5%). CDC provided diagnostic assistance for 9.5% of confirmed cases and tested 8.0% of specimens with P. falciparum infections for antimalarial resistance markers. Most patients (94.8%) had symptom onset <90 days after returning to the United States from a country with malaria transmission. Of the U.S. civilian patients who reported reason for travel, 73.1% were visiting friends and relatives. The proportion of U.S. residents with malaria who reported taking any chemoprophylaxis in 2017 (28.4%) was similar to that in 2016 (26.4%), and adherence was poor among those who took chemoprophylaxis. Among the 996 U.S. residents with malaria for whom information on chemoprophylaxis use and travel region were known, 93.3% did not adhere to or did not take a CDC-recommended chemoprophylaxis regimen. Among 805 women with malaria, 27 reported being pregnant. Of these, 10 pregnant women were U.S. residents, and none reported taking chemoprophylaxis to prevent malaria. A total of 26 (1.2%) malaria cases occurred among U.S. military personnel in 2017, fewer than in 2016 (41 [2.0%]). Among all reported cases in 2017, a total of 312 (14.4%) were classified as severe malaria illnesses, and seven persons died. In 2017, CDC analyzed 117 P. falciparum-positive and six P. falciparum mixed-species samples for antimalarial resistance markers (although certain loci were untestable in some samples); identification of genetic polymorphisms associated with resistance to pyrimethamine were found in 108 (97.3%), to sulfadoxine in 77 (69.4%), to chloroquine in 38 (33.3%), to mefloquine in three (2.7%), and to atovaquone in three (2.7%); no specimens tested contained a marker for artemisinin resistance. The data completeness of key variables (species, country of acquisition, and resident status) was lower in 2017 (74.4%) than in 2016 (79.4%).

INTERPRETATION

The number of reported malaria cases in 2017 continued a decades-long increasing trend, and for the second year in a row the highest number of cases since 1971 have been reported. Despite progress in malaria control in recent years, the disease remains endemic in many areas globally. The importation of malaria reflects the overall increase in global travel to and from these areas. Fifty-six percent of all cases were among persons who had traveled from West Africa, and among U.S. civilians, visiting friends and relatives was the most common reason for travel (73.1%). Frequent international travel combined with the inadequate use of prevention measures by travelers resulted in the highest number of imported malaria cases detected in the United States in 4 decades.

PUBLIC HEALTH ACTIONS

The best way to prevent malaria is to take chemoprophylaxis medication during travel to a country where malaria is endemic. Adherence to recommended malaria prevention strategies among U.S. travelers would reduce the numbers of imported cases; reasons for nonadherence include prematurely stopping after leaving the area where malaria was endemic, forgetting to take the medication, and experiencing a side effect. Travelers might not understand the risk that malaria poses to them; thus, health care providers should incorporate risk education to motivate travelers to be adherent to chemoprophylaxis. Malaria infections can be fatal if not diagnosed and treated promptly with antimalarial medications appropriate for the patient's age, medical history, the likely country of malaria acquisition, and previous use of antimalarial chemoprophylaxis. Antimalarial use for chemoprophylaxis and treatment should be informed by the most recent guidelines, which are frequently updated. In 2018, two formulations of tafenoquine (i.e., Arakoda and Krintafel) were approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in the United States. Arakoda was approved for use by adults for chemoprophylaxis; the regimen requires a predeparture loading dose, taking the medication weekly during travel, and a short course posttravel. The Arakoda chemoprophylaxis regimen is shorter than alternative regimens, which could possibly improve adherence. This medication also might prevent relapses. Krintafel was approved for radical cure of P. vivax infections in those aged >16 years and should be co-administered with chloroquine (https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/new_info/2020/tafenoquine_2020.html). In April 2019, intravenous artesunate became the first-line medication for treatment of severe malaria in the United States. Artesunate was recently FDA approved but is not yet commercially available. The drug can be obtained from CDC under an investigational new drug protocol. Detailed recommendations for preventing malaria are available to the general public at the CDC website (https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/travelers/drugs.html). Health care providers should consult the CDC Guidelines for Treatment of Malaria in the United States and contact the CDC's Malaria Hotline for case management advice when needed. Malaria treatment recommendations are available online (https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/diagnosis_treatment) and from the Malaria Hotline (770-488-7788 or toll-free 855-856-4713). Persons submitting malaria case reports (care providers, laboratories, and state and local public health officials) should provide complete information because incomplete reporting compromises case investigations and efforts to prevent infections and examine trends in malaria cases. Molecular surveillance of antimalarial drug resistance markers (https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/features/ars.html) enables CDC to track, guide treatment, and manage drug resistance in malaria parasites both domestically and internationally. More samples are needed to improve the completeness of antimalarial drug resistance analysis; therefore, CDC requests that blood specimens be submitted for any case of malaria diagnosed in the United States.

摘要

问题/状况:人类疟疾由疟原虫属的红细胞内原虫引起。这些寄生虫通过感染性雌性按蚊叮咬传播。美国的大多数疟疾感染发生在前往有持续疟疾传播地区旅行的人当中。然而,偶尔也有未出过国的人通过接触受感染的血液制品、先天性传播、医院感染或本地蚊媒传播而感染疟疾。在美国开展疟疾监测,以提供有关其发生情况(如时间、地理和人口统计学)的信息,为旅行者和患者的预防和治疗建议提供指导,并在发现本地获得性病例时促进快速传播控制措施。

涵盖时期

本报告总结了2017年发病的确诊疟疾病例以及前几年的趋势。

系统描述

通过血涂片显微镜检查、聚合酶链反应或快速诊断测试诊断的疟疾病例,通过电子实验室报告或由医疗保健提供者或实验室工作人员报告给地方和州卫生部门。病例调查由地方和州卫生部门进行,报告通过国家疟疾监测系统(NMSS)、国家法定疾病监测系统(NNDSS)或直接向疾病预防控制中心(CDC)咨询后传输给CDC。CDC参考实验室提供诊断援助,并对医疗保健提供者或地方或州卫生部门提交的血样进行抗疟药耐药性标记物检测。本报告总结了来自NMSS和NNDSS的所有病例、CDC参考实验室报告以及CDC临床咨询的整合数据。

结果

CDC收到2017年有症状发作的2161例确诊疟疾病例报告,包括2例先天性病例、3例隐匿性病例和2例通过输血获得的病例。自20世纪70年代中期以来,美国诊断出的疟疾病例数量一直在增加;2017年报告的病例数是45年来最高的,超过了2016年报告的2078例确诊病例的前一个峰值。在2017年的病例中,共有1819例(86.1%)为输入性病例,起源于非洲;其中1216例(66.9%)来自西非。2017年来自西非的输入性病例总体比例(57.6%)高于2016年(51.6%)。在所有病例中,恶性疟原虫感染占大多数(1523例[70.5%]),其次是间日疟原虫(216例[10.0%])、卵形疟原虫(119例[5.5%])和三日疟原虫(55例[2.6%])。两种或更多种疟原虫感染的病例有22例(1.0%)。226例(10.5%)病例未报告感染的疟原虫种类或感染种类未确定。CDC为9.5%的确诊病例提供了诊断援助,并对8.0%的恶性疟原虫感染标本进行了抗疟药耐药性标记物检测。大多数患者(94.8%)在从有疟疾传播的国家返回美国后<90天出现症状。在报告旅行原因的美国平民患者中,73.1%是探亲访友。2017年报告服用任何化学预防药物的美国疟疾患者比例(28.4%)与2016年(26.4%)相似,且服用化学预防药物的患者依从性较差。在996名已知化学预防药物使用情况和旅行地区的美国疟疾患者中,93.3%未遵守或未采取CDC推荐化学预防方案。在805名患有疟疾的女性中,27名报告怀孕。其中,10名孕妇是美国居民,且均未报告采取化学预防措施来预防疟疾。2017年美国军事人员中共有26例(1.2%)疟疾病例,少于2016年(41例[2.0%])。在2017年报告的所有病例中,共有312例(14.4%)被归类为严重疟疾病例,7人死亡。2017年,CDC分析了117份恶性疟原虫阳性和6份恶性疟原虫混合种样本的抗疟药耐药性标记物(尽管某些位点在一些样本中无法检测);发现与对乙胺嘧啶耐药相关的基因多态性在108份样本(97.3%)中存在,对磺胺多辛耐药的在77份样本(69.4%)中存在,对氯喹耐药的在38份样本(33.3%)中存在,对甲氟喹耐药的在3份样本(2.7%)中存在,对阿托伐醌耐药的在3份样本(2.7%)中存在;未检测到含有青蒿素耐药标记物的样本。2017年关键变量(疟原虫种类、感染国家和居民身份)的数据完整性(74.4%)低于2016年(79.4%)。

解读

2017年报告的疟疾病例数量延续了长达数十年的上升趋势,且连续第二年报告了自1971年以来的最高病例数。尽管近年来疟疾控制取得了进展,但该疾病在全球许多地区仍然流行。疟疾的输入反映了往返这些地区的全球旅行总体增加。所有病例中有56%发生在从西非旅行归来的人当中,在美国平民中,探亲访友是最常见的旅行原因(73.1%)。频繁的国际旅行加上旅行者预防措施使用不足,导致美国在40年来检测到的输入性疟疾病例数量最多。

公共卫生行动

预防疟疾的最佳方法是在前往疟疾流行国家旅行期间服用化学预防药物。美国旅行者遵守推荐的疟疾预防策略将减少输入性病例数量;不遵守的原因包括在离开疟疾流行地区后过早停药、忘记服药以及出现副作用。旅行者可能不了解疟疾对他们构成的风险;因此,医疗保健提供者应纳入风险教育,以促使旅行者坚持化学预防。如果不及时用适合患者年龄、病史、可能感染疟疾国家以及先前使用抗疟化学预防药物情况的抗疟药物进行诊断和治疗,疟疾感染可能致命。抗疟药物用于化学预防和治疗应遵循最新指南,这些指南经常更新。2018年,两种tafenoquine制剂(即Arakoda和Krintafel)被美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)批准在美国使用。Arakoda被批准供成人用于化学预防;该方案需要在出发前服用负荷剂量,旅行期间每周服药,旅行后服用一个短疗程。Arakoda化学预防方案比其他方案更短,这可能会提高依从性。这种药物也可能预防复发。Krintafel被批准用于16岁以上人群间日疟原虫感染的根治,应与氯喹联合使用(https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/new_info/2020/tafenoquine_2020.html)。2019年4月,静脉注射青蒿琥酯成为美国治疗严重疟疾的一线药物。青蒿琥酯最近获得FDA批准,但尚未上市。该药物可根据研究性新药方案从CDC获得。预防疟疾的详细建议可在CDC网站(https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/travelers/drugs.html)上向公众提供。医疗保健提供者应参考美国CDC疟疾治疗指南,并在需要时联系CDC疟疾热线获取病例管理建议。疟疾治疗建议可在线获取(https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/diagnosis_treatment),也可从疟疾热线(770 - 488 - 7788或免费电话855 - 856 - 4713)获取。提交疟疾病例报告的人员(医疗保健提供者、实验室以及州和地方公共卫生官员)应提供完整信息,因为报告不完整会影响病例调查以及预防感染和研究疟疾病例趋势的工作。抗疟药耐药性标记物的分子监测(https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/features/ars.html)使CDC能够在国内和国际上跟踪、指导治疗并管理疟原虫的耐药性。需要更多样本以提高抗疟药耐药性分析的完整性;因此,CDC要求提交在美国诊断出的任何疟疾病例血样。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/d70d/8017932/75432aa6af5f/ss7002a1-F1.jpg

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