Bureau of Epidemiology, Pennsylvania Department of Health.
Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, CDC.
Am J Transplant. 2023 Nov;23(11):1811-1814. doi: 10.1016/j.ajt.2023.10.009.
In July 2022, the Pennsylvania Department of Health received two reports of laboratory-confirmed Legionnaires disease in patients who had recently received lung transplants from the same donor at a single Pennsylvania hospital. The donor's cause of death was freshwater drowning in a river, raising suspicion of potential donor-derived transmission, because Legionella bacteria naturally live in fresh water. Further investigation of patients receiving other organs from the same donor did not identify additional legionellosis cases. Health care-associated infection caused by water exposure at the hospital was also evaluated as a potential source of infection and was found to be unlikely. Hospital water quality parameter measurements collected during May-June 2022 were within expected ranges and no water disruptions were noted, although no testing for Legionella was performed during this period. Notifiable disease data did not identify any other Legionnaires disease cases with exposure to this hospital within the 6 months before or after the two cases. Although laboratory testing did not confirm the source of recipient infections, available data suggest that the most likely source was the donor lungs. This cluster highlights the need for increased clinical awareness of possible infection with Legionella in recipients of lungs from donors who drowned in fresh water before organ recovery.
2022 年 7 月,宾夕法尼亚州卫生部门收到两例实验室确诊的军团病报告,这两例患者均于同一宾夕法尼亚州医院接受了来自同一位供体的肺移植。供体的死亡原因是在河中溺水导致淡水,这引起了对潜在供体传播的怀疑,因为军团菌自然存在于淡水中。对接受同一供体其他器官的患者进行的进一步调查并未发现其他军团病病例。医院水中暴露导致的医源性感染也被评估为潜在的感染源,但不太可能。虽然在此期间未进行军团菌检测,但在 2022 年 5 月至 6 月期间收集的医院水质参数测量值在预期范围内,且未发现水系统中断。在这两例病例发生前后 6 个月内,可报告疾病数据并未发现任何其他与该医院暴露相关的军团病病例。尽管实验室检测未能确认受者感染的来源,但现有数据表明,最有可能的来源是供体肺。该聚集事件凸显了需要提高临床意识,即来自在器官回收前于淡水溺水死亡的供体的肺移植受者可能感染军团菌。