National Referral Unit for Tropical Diseases, Infectious Diseases Department, Ramón y Cajal University Hospital, IRYCIS, Universidad de Alcalá, CIBER de Enfermedades Infecciosas, Madrid, Spain.
Division of Infectious Diseases and Travel Medicine, Mount Auburn Hospital, Cambridge, MA, USA.
J Travel Med. 2023 May 18;30(3). doi: 10.1093/jtm/taad039.
Melioidosis, caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei, may be considered a neglected tropical disease that remains underdiagnosed in many geographical areas. Travellers can act as the sentinels of disease activity, and data from imported cases may help complete the global map of melioidosis.
A literature search for imported melioidosis for the period 2016-22 was performed in PubMed and Google Scholar.
In total, 137 reports of melioidosis associated with travel were identified. The majority were males (71%) and associated with exposure in Asia (77%) (mainly Thailand, 41%, and India, 9%). A minority acquired the infection in the Americas-Caribbean area (6%), Africa (5%) and Oceania (2%). The most frequent comorbidity was diabetes mellitus (25%) followed by underlying pulmonary, liver or renal disease (8, 5 and 3%, respectively). Alcohol/tobacco use were noted for seven and six patients, respectively (5%). Five patients (4%) had associated non-human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-related immunosuppression, and three patients (2%) had HIV infection. One patient (0.8%) had concomitant coronavirus disease 19. A proportion (27%) had no underlying diseases. The most frequent clinical presentations included pneumonia (35%), sepsis (30%) and skin/soft tissue infections (14%). Most developed symptoms <1 week after return (55%), and 29% developed symptoms >12 weeks after. Ceftazidime and meropenem were the main treatments used during the intensive intravenous phase (52 and 41% of patients, respectively) and the majority (82%) received co-trimoxazole alone/combination, for the eradication phase. Most patients had a favourable outcome/survived (87%). The search also retrieved cases in imported animals or cases secondary to imported commercial products.
As post-pandemic travel soars, health professionals should be aware of the possibility of imported melioidosis with its diverse presentations. Currently, no licensed vaccine is available, so prevention in travellers should focus on protective measures (avoiding contact with soil/stagnant water in endemic areas). Biological samples from suspected cases require processing in biosafety level 3 facilities.
类鼻疽病由伯克霍尔德菌引起,可能被视为一种被忽视的热带病,在许多地理区域仍未得到充分诊断。旅行者可以作为疾病活动的哨兵,来自输入性病例的数据可能有助于完善类鼻疽病的全球分布图。
在 PubMed 和 Google Scholar 上对 2016-22 年期间的输入性类鼻疽病进行了文献检索。
共发现 137 例与旅行相关的类鼻疽病报告。大多数患者为男性(71%),并在亚洲(77%)(主要是泰国,占 41%,印度,占 9%)接触后患病。少数患者在美洲-加勒比地区(6%)、非洲(5%)和大洋洲(2%)感染。最常见的合并症是糖尿病(25%),其次是肺部、肝脏或肾脏疾病(分别为 8%、5%和 3%)。分别有 7 例和 6 例患者有酒精/烟草使用史(5%)。5 例(4%)患者存在非人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)相关免疫抑制,3 例(2%)患者感染 HIV。1 例(0.8%)患者同时患有 2019 冠状病毒病。一部分(27%)患者没有基础疾病。最常见的临床表现包括肺炎(35%)、败血症(30%)和皮肤/软组织感染(14%)。大多数患者在返回后<1 周出现症状(55%),29%的患者在返回后>12 周出现症状。在强化静脉内治疗阶段,头孢他啶和美罗培南是主要治疗药物(分别占 52%和 41%的患者),大多数(82%)患者单独/联合使用复方磺胺甲噁唑进行根除阶段治疗。大多数患者预后良好/存活(87%)。检索结果还包括输入性动物病例或继发于输入性商业产品的病例。
随着大流行后旅行的激增,医务人员应该意识到输入性类鼻疽病的可能性及其多种表现。目前,尚无许可的疫苗,因此旅行者的预防重点应放在防护措施上(避免在流行地区接触土壤/死水)。疑似病例的生物样本需要在生物安全 3 级设施中处理。