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An Update on Emerging Infectious Diseases WF Schlech, MD 9th Travel Health Conf Winnipeg April 2011 Infectious disease is one of the few genuine adventures left in the world. The dragons are all dead and the lance grows rusty in the chimney corner . . . About the only sporting proposition that remains unimpaired by the relentless domestication of a once free-living human species is the war against those ferocious little fellow creatures, which lurk in the dark corners and stalk us in the bodies of rats, mice and all kinds of domestic animals; which fly and crawl with the insects, and waylay us in our food and drink and even in our love. - (Hans Zinsser,1934 quoted in Murphy 1994) …J Keystone Want them protected! Emerging Infectious Diseases (EID) Defined • “New, reemerging or drug-resistant infections whose incidence in humans has increased within the past two decades or whose incidence threatens to increase in the near future.” Institute of Medicine, 1992 Definitions • New infectious disease Newly identified & previously unknown infectious agents that cause public health problems either locally or internationally eg HIV infection, Nipah virus, P.knowlesi Definition • Re-emerging infectious disease Infectious agents that have been known for some time, had fallen to such low levels that they were no longer considered public health problems & are now showing upward trends in incidence or prevalence worldwide eg tuberculosis, diptheria Definition • Drug resistant organisms Infectious agents that have developed resistance to antimicrobials and subsequently spread to many geographic areas eg MDR tuberculosis, resistant gonorrhea, MRSA, VRE, NDM-1 NDM-1 NEWLY IDENTIFIED INFECTIOUS DISEASES AND PATHOGENS Year 1993 1992 1991 1989 1988 1983 1982 1980 Disease or Pathogen Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (Sin Nombre virus) Vibrio cholerae O139 Guanarito virus Hepatitis C Hepatitis E; human herpesvirus 6 HIV Escherichia coli O157:H7; Lyme borreliosis; human T-lymphotropic virus type 2 Human T-lymphotropic virus Source: Workshop presentation by David Heymann, World Health Organization, 1999 NEWLY IDENTIFIED INFECTIOUS DISEASES AND PATHOGENS Year 2009 2004 2003 1999 1997 1996 1995 1994 Disease or Pathogen H1N1 Avian influenza (human cases) SARS Nipah virus H5N1 (avian influenza A virus) New variant Creutzfelt-Jacob disease; Australian bat lyssavirus Human herpesvirus 8 (Kaposi’s sarcoma virus) Savia virus; Hendra virus Source: Workshop presentation by David Heymann, World Health Organization, 1999 Examples of Re-Emerging Infectious Diseases • Diphtheria- Early 1990s epidemic in Eastern Europe(1980- 1% cases; 199490% cases) • Cholera- 100% increase worldwide in 1998 (new strain eltor, 0139) • Human Plague- India (1994) after 15-30 years absence. Dengue/ DHF- Over past 40 years, 20-fold increase to nearly 0.5 million (between 1990-98) Dr. KANUPRIYA CHATURVEDI Percent Fever in Returned Travelers N=3907 NEJM 2005;354:119-30 etiology Carib CAm SAm SSA malaria <1 13 13 dengue 23 12 14 62 14 13 <1 14 32 mono rickettsia 7 0 7 0 8 0 6 2 1 Salmon. 2 3 2 <1 14 3 1 SA SEA 3 2 Chikungunya: “that which bends up” 17 17 Chikungunya Dengue www.healthmap.org/dengue/ 18 DISEASE EMERGENCE AND RE-EMERGENCE: CAUSES • GENETIC/BIOLOGIC FACTORS – Host and agent mutations – Increased survival of susceptibles • HUMAN BEHAVIOR – POLITICAL – SOCIAL – ECONOMIC • PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS • ECOLOGIC FACTORS – Climatic changes – Deforestation – Etc. Convergence Model FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO EMERGENCE OR RE-EMERGENCE OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES (1) • Human demographic change by which persons begin to live in previously uninhabited remote areas of the world and are exposed to new environmental sources of infectious agents, insects and animals • Unsustainable urbanization causes breakdowns of sanitary and other public health measures in overcrowded cities (e.g., slums) FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO EMERGENCE OR RE-EMERGENCE OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES (2) • Economic development and changes in the use of land, including deforestation, reforestation, and urbanization • Global warming - climate changes cause changes in geographical distribution of agents and vectors • Changing human behaviours, such as increased use of child-care facilities, sexual and drug use behaviours, and patterns of outdoor recreation • Social inequality FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO EMERGENCE OR RE-EMERGENCE OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES (3) • International travel and commerce that quickly transport people and goods vast distances • Changes in food processing and handling, including foods prepared from many different individual animals and countries, and transported great distances 6 Days to Circum navigate ( the Globe 350 ) 400 5 300 4 250 200 3 150 2 100 50 1 0 0 1850 1900 Year 1950 World Population in billions ( ) Speed of Global Travel in Relation to World Population Growth 2000 CDC FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO EMERGENCE OR RE-EMERGENCE OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES (4) • Evolution of pathogenic infectious agents by which they may infect new hosts, produce toxins, or adapt by responding to changes in the host immunity.(e.g. influenza, HIV) • Development of resistance by infectious agents such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae to chemoprophylactic or chemotherapeutic medicines. S.Typhi Drug Resistance 1999-2006 Multidrug resistant S.typhi Naladixic acid resistant S.typhi 87% cases from India NARST Sensitivity to ciprofloxacin JAMA. 2009;302(8):859-865 FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO EMERGENCE OR RE-EMERGENCE OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES (5) • Resistance of the vectors of vector-borne infectious diseases to pesticides. • Immunosuppression of persons due to medical treatments or new diseases that result in infectious diseases caused by agents not usually pathogenic in healthy hosts.(e.g. leukemia patients) FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO EMERGENCE OR RE-EMERGENCE OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES (6) • Deterioration in surveillance systems for infectious diseases, including laboratory support, to detect new or emerging disease problems at an early stage (e.g. Indonesian resistance to “scientific colonialism”) • Illiteracy limits knowledge and implementation of prevention strategies • Lack of political will – corruption, other priorities GeoSentinel: The Global Surveillance Network of the ISTM and CDC A worldwide communications and data collection network of travel/tropical medicine clinics Geosentinel Network Map 49 clinics & 166 collaborators 49 travel/tropical medicine clinics globally (since 1996) FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO EMERGENCE OR RE-EMERGENCE OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES (7) • Biowarfare/bioterrorism: An unfortunate potential source of new or emerging disease threats (e.g. anthrax and letters) • War, civil unrest – creates refugees, food and housing shortages, increased density of living, etc. • Famine causing reduced immune capacity, etc. • Manufacturing strategies; e.g., pooling of plasma, etc. GLOBAL EXAMPLES OF EMERGING AND RE-EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES AS Fauci Direct economic impact of selected infectious disease outbreaks, 19902003 These are costly! Heymann DL. Emerging and re-emerging infections. In Oxford Textbook of Public Health, 5th ed, 2009, p1267. Drug Resistant Microorganisms Preventing Emerging Infectious Diseases: A Strategy for the 21st century. The CDC Plan, p. 26, 1998 Multidrug resistant National Academies Press http://www.nap.edu/books/0309071844/html/13.html War as a factor in spread of MDR organisms Acinetobacter isolates from FOB-Delta New Combat Surgical/Trauma Suite • High risk organism isolation over time during construction of medical facility • MDR Gram negatives not isolated prior to patient introduction into facility but high risk pathogens present Enserink M. Old drugs losing effectiveness against flu; could statins fill gap? Science 309:177, 2005. Recent EIDs: Influenza Structure of the Influenza Virus Hemagglutinin (HA) 16 types in influenza A Neuraminidase (NA) 9 types in influenza A M2 Nucleoprotein (NP) ssRNA–highly mutable 8 segments-allows reassortment during double infection M1 Polymerase (P) Proteins Adapted from: Hayden FG et al. Clin Virol. 1997:911-42. Viral Nomenclature Type of Nuclear Material Hemagglutinin Neuraminidase A / Sydney / 184 / 93 (H3N2) Virus type Geographic Strain Year of origin number isolation Virus subtype CDC. Atkinson W, et al. Chapter 13: Influenza. In: Epidemiology and Prevention of Vaccine-Preventable Diseases, 4th ed. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, 1998, 220 Antigenic Drift Antigenic Shift INFLUENZA PANDEMICS IN THE 20th CENTURY Years 1918-1919 “Spanish” 1957-58 “Asian” 1968-69 “Hong Kong” US Spread from Virus Mortality Greatest Risk Asia to US Type A 500,000 Young, Unknown H1N1 healthy adults Type A H2N2 70,000 Infants, elderly 4-5 mo Type A H3N2 34,000 Infants, elderly 2-3 mo HHS Pandemic Influenza Plan, October 2005 Some Confirmed Instances of Avian Influenza Infecting Humans since 1997 (*) Year 1997 1999 2002 2003 2003 2003 2003 2004 2004 Virus H5N1 H9N2 H7N2 H5N1 H7N7 H9N2 H7N2 H5N1 H7N3 Location Hong Kong Hong Kong Virginia Hong Kong Netherlands Hong Kong New York Thailand, Vietnam Canada Summary tally: H5N1: 3 H7N2: 2 H7N3: 1 H7N7: 1 H9N2: 2 Is this virus actively reassorting its genes to achieve a unique combination of virulence and communicability? (*) For details see: www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/gen-info/avian-flu-humans.htm Thanks to Eric Brenner, MD for slide. Characteristics of H5N1 Avian Influenza 1. Highly infectious and pathogenic for domestic poultry 2.Wild fowl, ducks asymptomatic reservoir 3.Now endemic in poultry in Southeast Asia 4.Proportion of humans with subclinical infection unknown 5.Case fatality in humans is >50% Novel Swine origin Influenza A (H1N1) • Swine flu causes respiratory disease in pigs – high level of illness, low death rates • Pigs can get infected by human, avian and swine influenza virus • Occasional human swine infection reported • In US from December 2005 to February 2009, 12 cases of human infection with swine flu reported Kaplan K. How the new virus came to be. LA Times, 14 Sept, 2009; latimes.com/health Swine Flu Influenza A (H1N1) • March 18 2009 – ILI outbreak reported in Mexico • April 15th CDC identifies H1N1 (swine flu) • April 25th WHO declares public health emergency • April 27th Pandemic alert raised to phase 4 • April 29th Pandemic alert raised to phase 5 Pandemic H1N1 (Swine flu) • Worldwide- 162,380 cases 1154 deaths • Canada – 400+ deaths (Jan 2010) Recent EIDs: SARS A Novel Virus: SARS NEJM May 15, 2003 SARS: Summary • In retrospect epidemic started ~ November 2002 in Southern China • WHO issues “Global Alert” March 2002 • February 2003 very infectious patient infects many guests at Metropole Hotel in Hong Kong who in turn spread SARS to their own countries • World attention remained focused on SARS until global surveillance shows all chains of transmission interrupted ~ July 2003 SARS in Toronto, 2003 Is there a small subset of SARS patients who account for a disproportionate share of transmission? MMWR May 9, 2003 / Vol. 52 / No. 18 - I Patients No: 1, 6, 35, 130&127 seemed to be “hypertransmitters” Recent EIDs: MDR and XDR TB 35 yo HIV (+) woman with productive am cough ,low grade fever, and weight loss over several weeks. On exam cachectic, normal chest exam. CXR -Dx : Pulmonary tuberculosis Tuberculosis • Estimated 15 million Americans with latent infections • Minorities affected disproportionately [as is the case with many other infectious diseases] – 54% active M. Tuberculosis cases (1995) reported among African American and Hispanic populations – An additional 17.5% among Asians • In some U.S. sectors, morbidity rates surpass those of poorest countries Cases of M. Tuberculosis by Year of Diagnosis, 1953-1999 90,000 80,000 70,000 60,000 50,000 40,000 30,000 20,000 10,000 19 53 19 55 19 57 19 59 19 61 19 63 19 65 19 67 19 69 19 71 19 73 19 75 19 77 19 79 19 81 19 83 19 85 19 87 19 89 19 91 19 93 19 95 19 97 19 99 0 Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 20001 Estimated TB incidence rate, 2006 Estimated new TB cases (all forms) per 100 000 population No estimate 0-24 25-49 50-99 100-299 300 or more The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the World Health Organization concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Dotted lines on maps represent approximate border lines for which there may not yet be full agreement. © WHO 2006. All rights reserved Prevalence of HIV/TB co-infection Global incidence of tuberculosis Still rising as a result of the growing epidemic in Africa Incidence per 100,000 per year 600 AFR high HIV 500 400 300 AFR low HIV Sth East Asia 200 World West. Pacific East. Medit. East. Europe Lat. America Cent. Euro, Est Market 100 0 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 MDR and XDR TB Definitions • Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDRTB) Resistance to Isoniazid and Rifampicin • Extensively (extremely) drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) MDR-TB plus resistance to a second line injectable drug such as amykacin plus a quinolone. Impact of drug resistance on TB cure rates with standard 4-drug therapy % Success New Case Retreated Pan-susceptible Any resistance, not MDR INH resistance, not MDR RIF resistance, not MDR M DR 85 81 82 73 52 67 56 54 53 29 Espinal, JAMA 2000; 283:2537 XDR-TB related to district hospital, Tugela Ferry, KwaZulu-Natal South Africa 2006 Demographics of XDR TB Patients Resistant to all drugs tested (XDR) Characteristics Total (N) 53 Age: years: Median (range) 35 (20-75) Sex: Female (%) 25 (49%) Sputum Smear: Positive: n (%) 42 (79%) Negative: n (%) 11 (21%) HIV Characteristics Characteristic XDR TB Patients HIV Tested: n (%) 44 (86%) HIV positive (if tested): Recent CD4 count: mean median (range) On Antiretroviral Therapy: n (%) 100% 72.7 63 (9 - 283) 15 (34%) Mortality • 52 of 53 (98%) XDR TB patients died • Median survival from sputum collection 16 days (range 2-210 days) Transmission of XDR TB • 64% of patients hospitalized for any cause before onset of XDR TB • 2 healthcare workers died with confirmed XDR TB – 4 other workers died with suspected XDR TB • Nosocomial transmission in hospitals probable • Transmission in community also possible since 36% XDR TB patients with no prior hospitalizations Summary • New and re-emerging infectious diseases continue to challenge public health practitioners • Adequate surveillance systems remain critical in detecting and controlling these pathogens • Ultimate control will depend on development of new vaccines and antimicrobial agents and better use of our current armamentarium Thank you!