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Author Topic: Few risk infection from TB patient, US CDC says  (Read 1604 times)
nec208
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« on: May 30, 2007, 02:41:58 PM »


Few risk infection from TB patient, US CDC says

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N30503065.htm

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WASHINGTON, May 30 (Reuters) - A man infected with a dangerous strain of tuberculosis fled across Europe to avoid detention, taking flight after flight to stay ahead of public health officials, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Wednesday.

The CDC said the patient, who was forcibly isolated after he arrived in the United States, is not likely to have been highly infectious, but they had to act because of his behavior.

He has a difficult-to-treat form of TB called extensive drug resistant TB, or XDR TB.

"We believe that his degree of infectiousness is quite low," Dr. Martin Cetron, director of the CDC's Division of Global Migration and Quarantine, told a news conference.

But the man, now being held under isolation in a hospital near his home in Atlanta, had been told by state health officials he had a drug-resistant form of tuberculosis.

"They clearly told him not to travel," Cetron said.

It was the first time the CDC had invoked a federal isolation order since 1963, when a patient infected with smallpox was detained.

The CDC has been evaluating its quarantine powers amid recent fears of a pandemic of influenza. The H5N1 strain of avian influenza has killed 186 people out of 307 infected, and experts believe it could change into a form that transmits easily from one person to another, sparking a pandemic.

Experts repeatedly point out that anyone could carry any virus around the world on a single flight.

"Anyone who's sick shouldn't be getting on an aircraft. And that is a basic principle for any contagious disease," Dr. Ken Castro, CDC's director of tuberculosis elimination, told the news conference.

BALANCING FREEDOMS

"In many ways we balance individual freedoms and the public good and we depend on a covenant of public trust," Cetron added.

"In this instance, the reason for use of a federal isolation order is because of the nature of international travel and the potential for interstate spread," Cetron said.

"We don't take this authority lightly."

The patient told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that he had been in Italy on his honeymoon. He knew he had multi-drug resistant TB but traveled anyway.

When authorities told him he had XDR TB, which is much harder to treat, they also told him he would be banned from flying. Nevertheless, he and his new wife traveled from Italy to Prague, and from there to Montreal, where they drove across the border from Canada to New York.

The man, who began his trip by flying from Atlanta to Paris and then to Greece, told the newspaper he did not want to put anyone at risk but wanted to get home for treatment.

"We were exploring all sorts of options to remove the public health concern that he represented," Cetron said, confirming many of the details of the patient's travels without identifying him.

The CDC caught up with him in New York and he agreed to go home to Georgia for treatment. He will eventually get surgery and prolonged antibiotic treatment at National Jewish Medical and Research Center in Denver.

The CDC said about 70 to 80 people who sat close to the patient on two long flights are being contacted because of the slight chance they had the prolonged exposure needed to become infected.

They were in the two rows in front of him, the same row as the patient, and two rows behind him. All crew are also being contacted.

"Tuberculosis is spread through prolonged contact," Castro said. "That is why we focus on these long-haul contained spaces with concentrated air circulation."

They said the patient has few symptoms, is not coughing, and did not have immediate evidence of the TB bacilli in his sputum. The TB bacteria were only identified after growing them in lab culture, which suggests he is not highly infectious.
nec208
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« Reply #1 on: May 30, 2007, 02:48:15 PM »

http://www.forbes.com/forbeslife/health/feeds/hscout/2007/05/30/hscout605059.html

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WEDNESDAY, May 30 (HealthDay News) -- A leading tuberculosis expert believes U.S. health officials were right to quarantine a Georgia man with a dangerous form of the respiratory disease who took two trans-Atlantic flights, possibly infecting fellow passengers in the process.
But a second TB expert said the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's decision to isolate the man in an Atlanta hospital was unwarranted, contending that the man is "minimally infectious."

Meanwhile, the man at the center of the controversy, who asked that his name be withheld due to the stigma associated with the disease, disputed federal and local health officials' claims that he traveled abroad in violation of their wishes. He said that while officials told him they preferred that he postpone his long-planned wedding in Greece and honeymoon, they did not prohibit him from flying. And the man knew he had tuberculosis but did not think he posed a health risk, according to published reports.

On Tuesday, CDC officials issued the first federal isolation order since 1963 to quarantine the man, who had been diagnosed with "extensively drug-resistant" TB, also called XDR-TB. This form of the disease resists many drugs used to treat the infection.

On May 12, the man flew from Atlanta to Paris, continued on to Prague, then took a return flight to Montreal, Canada, on May 24, before driving back into the United States.

The CDC has advised passengers who were on the two flights to get tested for tuberculosis, although they are thought to be at low risk of infection from the disease, agency officials said Wednesday.

"We believe that the patient's degree of infectiveness is limited," Dr. Martin Cetron, the CDC's director of the Division of Global Migration and Quarantine, said during an afternoon teleconference. Tests show the man was carrying a relatively low level of the tuberculosis bacteria, the expert said.

Cetron noted that on the flight from Atlanta to Paris, some 40 to 50 passengers who sat near the man were those most likely at risk. The man probably sat in row 51. The same is true for the 30 passengers who sat near the man on the flight from Prague to Montreal. On that flight the man sat in seat 12C.

However, Cetron said that the CDC and other health agencies in the United States and abroad would notify all passengers on both planes as well as passengers who flew with the patient on several shorter flights to and from Greece and Italy.

Dr. Tawanda Gumbo, an assistant professor of internal medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas and an infectious disease expert who specializes in TB and XDR-TB, believes that isolating the patient was the right thing to do.

"The best we can do right now is to make sure it doesn't spread. We don't want it to spread," Gumbo said, noting that tuberculosis can be very contagious. "You don't have to do anything, just breathe," he added.

It's very possible that passengers on both of the trans-Atlantic flights the patient took were infected, Gumbo said. "We know from the past that a single patient on an airplane can infect other people on the airplane," he said.

But Philip Alcabes, an epidemiologist and professor at New York City's Hunter College School of Health Sciences, said the man posed no public safety threat, and quarantine was "a maximum penalty for a minor medical problem."

"Pulling the trigger on a quarantine should be reserved for serious medical emergencies that pose a genuine health hazard to the general population," Alcabes said. "Doing so for this event only serves to trivialize the real quarantine call-to-action when it is finally needed. The man in question is obviously minimally infectious, as his wife has not been infected."

"Transmission in an airplane is very unlikely, owing to the intrinsic difficulty of transmitting TB and to the relatively high rate of filtration of airplane cabin air," Alcabes said.

"The CDC is making much of the fact that the man's TB strain is drug resistant," Alcabes added. "That is of some clinical relevance but of no public health importance. Drug-resistant strains are no more infectious than other strains. This TB is no more likely to be transmitted in this way than garden-variety TB would. Transmission is not impossible, but highly unlikely."

Dr. Howard Njoo, of the Public Health Agency of Canada, agreed with Alcabes' view that the man posed little risk to his fellow passengers, adding that modern jetliners are equipped with air filters designed to screen out infectious germs like the ones that cause tuberculosis.

"The risk of transmission is considered to be very low; however, we cannot say definitively that the risk is zero and therefore we are undertaking certain public health measures," Njoo told told CTV's Canada AM on Wednesday morning.

Meanwhile, Dr. Julie Gerberding, director of the CDC, said Wednesday that her agency was working closely with airlines to locate passengers who may have been exposed to the rare, dangerous strain of tuberculosis.

The infected man flew to Paris on May 12 aboard Air France Flight 385, then returned to Montreal on May 24 aboard Czech Air Flight 0104, before driving into the United States at Champlain, N.Y.

CDC officials said they were focusing on the trans-Atlantic flights because that's where people would have had the most exposure to the patient. But the risk of infection was considered low, the officials said.

As for the patient, the Atlanta-area man said he doesn't think he did anything wrong.

"I didn't want to put anybody at risk," he told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution in a telephone interview from Grady Memorial Hospital, with an armed sheriff's deputy outside his door.

The man, who said he has no symptoms and feels healthy, said he has met regularly for treatment with Fulton County, Ga., health officials since January. He said the local officials and the CDC knew he had drug-resistant TB before he left the United States, but they did not prevent him from leaving when he told them about his planned wedding in Greece, the newspaper said.

He questioned why no health officials told him to cancel his wedding before he left Atlanta -- and why the CDC waited until he was on his honeymoon in Rome to order him into isolation.

"The county health department knew I was going over to have a honeymoon. We had a meeting before I left," he told the newspaper.

"We headed off to Greece thinking everything's fine," he told the paper. He said he contacted the paper because he wanted to make sure his side of the story was heard.

He told the newspaper he did not report to Italian health officials because he was afraid that if he didn't get back to the United States, he wouldn't get the treatment he needed to survive.

"I'm a very well-educated, successful, intelligent person," he said. "This is insane to me that I have an armed guard outside my door when I've cooperated with everything other than the whole solitary confinement in Italy thing."

The man is not facing prosecution, health officials said, according to the Associated Press.

The man has plans to travel to Denver's National Jewish Hospital, which specializes in respiratory disorders, where he is to undergo an operation that would remove part of his infected lung.

Gumbo noted that such surgery is similar to older treatments for TB. "Before we had effective drugs, one on the options was surgery," he said. "When we run out of therapies there is really nothing else that could be done.

Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis poses a growing threat because it is becoming more common throughout the world, Gumbo said. "It is being introduced into wider and wider populations," he said.
nec208
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« Reply #2 on: May 30, 2007, 09:33:00 PM »


Not good :(


TB-infected traveler is lesson in security


http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2007-05-30-tb-spread_N.htm


=====

The story of a man infected with a dangerous superbug who was able to leave the USA, travel around Europe for a couple of weeks, fly to Montreal and drive unimpeded back into the USA raises questions about the clash of personal freedom and public health.
Officials at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, working with health officials from several countries, are trying to locate 80 or more passengers who flew on trans-Atlantic flights this month and sat within two rows of a Georgia man who was infected with XDR-TB, a form of tuberculosis that is resistant to almost all antibiotics.


Q&A: What you need to know about drug-resistant TB

The patient is hospitalized under a federal isolation order in Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. The CDC is withholding his name, citing his privacy. The last time a similar order was issued was in 1963, when a patient was quarantined after exposure to smallpox.

The patient's odyssey has some asking whether he should be held criminally responsible for endangering other travelers. And others are asking whether federal agencies can really contain dangerous diseases in this era of global travel. This is what's known about his story:

FIND MORE STORIES IN: Homeland Security | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention | MONTREAL | TB | XDR | Martin Cetron
In a briefing Wednesday, CDC official Martin Cetron said the patient has been under medical care since January, when a chest X-ray, given for unrelated reasons, showed a lesion that later turned out to be TB.

The patient told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that he had not been ordered to avoid traveling and that health officials knew of his plans to go to Greece to be married and to Rome on his honeymoon. But health officials dispute that.

"There is a difference of opinion on whether anybody condoned his travel," Cetron said. "The (county) health department clearly told him not to travel. He was aware he had (drug-resistant TB) on the 10th of May and was told not to travel."

Cetron said a "written affirmation" of those instructions was being prepared, but before it could be delivered, the patient took off. He left Atlanta on May 12 and arrived in Paris the next day.

It was the first of a series of episodes in which the man seemed to slip out of the reach of health officials in the nick of time.

Cetron said the CDC found out on May 22 that the patient had XDR-TB and called him at his Rome hotel the next day.

"Our quarantine officer advised him he should not get on a commercial flight; he needed to stay put," Cetron said. He was also advised to wear a mask in public and told that efforts would be made to return him safely to the USA. But when a former CDC doctor working with the Italian Ministry of Health went to the hotel to see the patient, he had checked out.

Then the CDC set about contacting federal agencies to issue a no-fly order to prevent the man from boarding a commercial flight. But again, it was too late. By May 24, Cetron said, "we learned the patient was already landing in Montreal, via Prague."

From Montreal, the patient and his new wife drove across the Canadian border into New York, even though border officers at airports and land crossings nationwide had been ordered to stop them.

The Department of Homeland Security has reassigned the Customs and Border Protection officer who allowed the couple to enter the country in Champlain to administrative duties pending an internal investigation.

The investigation will seek to determine whether the officer asked the man for his identification, asked whether he had been to Europe and checked his name against information given by the CDC.

The patient went voluntarily to a New York Hospital, where he was placed in isolation for three days, then flown, at his request, to Atlanta. He is not thought to be highly contagious and is showing few symptoms, but under the advice of his doctor, he is planning to be moved for further treatment to National Jewish Hospital in Denver.

The investigation is in its early stages, CDC officials say, but already there are points of disagreement, including whether the patient had been told before he left the country that he had drug-resistant TB and absolutely should not travel.

The incident, said Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, has "homeland security implications." Thompson called for a hearing on the "poorly coordinated federal response."

"Any time there is a significant case or incident at a port of entry, we go back and review the facts associated with that incident very carefully to see if there are any lessons learned and to see if we can refortify our security posture at the border," says Homeland Security Department spokesman Russ Knocke.

The CDC is hoping a proposed new quarantine rule that would permit quick access to electronic airline manifests will be approved, making it possible to trace potentially infected travelers quicker. Currently, the agency can issue federal orders for isolation (for sick people) or quarantine (for people who have been exposed to an infectious disease) but rarely does.

"In many ways we balance individual freedom with the public good and rely on a covenant of trust," Cetron said. "We need to rely on people to do the right thing. We don't move quickly to compulsory orders. We take those quite seriously. Can we improve on our system? Of course. There will be many lessons learned."

Cetron said the patient broke no laws, but some argue he should be held accountable anyway.

"It wasn't as if this guy had an illness nobody knew about," says Dave Streitwieser, medical director for MedLink, which helps commercial airlines around the world deal with as many as 17,000 in-flight medical emergencies each year. "He had been told what he should and should not do and ignored that. I think that is criminally wrong. It's negligence."

However, he says, "any time you get on a crowded mode of transport, whether its an airplane or a bus, you are going to be potentially exposed to somebody else's airborne communicable disease. You can't make the risk zero."

Says Stanley Mohler, professor emeritus at the Division of Aerospace Medicine at Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine: "He's not very considerate of his fellow humans. It calls to the fore that the airlines have to be reminded again and again to be alert for these kinds of passengers."

Others say more information is needed. "We don't know why he decided to fly the coop, so to speak," says Robert Klitzman, a bioethics expert at Columbia University Medical Center. "Ethically, we believe as a democracy in autonomy, especially in health care."

Michael Osterholm of the University of Minnesota, an expert on disaster planning, says the case raises concerns about what would happen in "the opening days of a flu pandemic, where instead of one patient, there were 50. The system would implode quickly. We have to plan for this."

The man now hospitalized is a "harbinger, an index case," says Martin Blaser, professor of medicine at New York University School of Medicine. "XDR-TB is increasing all over the world, and we're not going to be immune from it. We need to use this as a warning" to develop new drugs and rapid diagnostic tests.

The emergence and spread of drug-resistant bacteria such as XDR-TB "takes us back to an era before we had antibiotics," he says.
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