Jason T Evans1, E Grace Smith2, Ashis Banerjee3, Robert Mm Smith4, James Dale5, John A Innes6, David Hunt3, Alan Tweddell7, Annette Wood8, Charlotte Anderson9, R Glyn Hewinson5, Noel H Smith5, Peter M Hawkey10, Pam Sonnenberg11. 1. Regional Centre for Mycobacteriology, West Midlands Public Health Laboratory, Health Protection Agency, Birmingham Heartlands Hospital, Birmingham B9 5SS, UK. Electronic address: jason.evans@heartofengland.nhs.uk. 2. Regional Centre for Mycobacteriology, West Midlands Public Health Laboratory, Health Protection Agency, Birmingham Heartlands Hospital, Birmingham B9 5SS, UK. 3. Health Protection Agency Regional Surveillance Unit (West Midlands), Birmingham, UK. 4. Zoonoses Surveillance Unit, National Public Health Service for Wales, Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre, Cardiff, UK. 5. TB Research Group, Veterinary Laboratories Agency, Weybridge, UK. 6. Birmingham Chest Clinic, Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham, UK. 7. Herefordshire and Worcestershire Health Protection Unit, UK. 8. Birmingham and Solihull Health Protection Unit, UK. 9. Tuberculosis Section, Health Protection Agency Centre for Infections, London, UK. 10. Regional Centre for Mycobacteriology, West Midlands Public Health Laboratory, Health Protection Agency, Birmingham Heartlands Hospital, Birmingham B9 5SS, UK; Division of Immunity and Infection, Medical School, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK. 11. Tuberculosis Section, Health Protection Agency Centre for Infections, London, UK; Department of Primary Care and Population Sciences, University College London, London, UK.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite a recent resurgence in the incidence of bovine tuberculosis in UK cattle herds, no associated rise in the number of cases in man has been noted. Disease due to human Mycobacterium bovis infection usually occurs in older patients, in whom drinking unpasteurised milk in the past is the probable source of infection. Person-to-person transmission is very rare. METHODS: After identification of two epidemiologically-linked cases of human M bovis infection through routine laboratory and surveillance activities, all patients identified with M bovis infection in the Midlands from 2001-05 (n=20) were assessed by DNA fingerprinting (MIRU-VNTR and spoligotyping), with additional interviews for patients with a clustered strain. FINDINGS: A cluster of six cases was identified. All clustered cases were young and UK-born; five patients had pulmonary disease, and one patient died due to M bovis meningitis, with four patients possessing factors predisposing to tuberculosis. All patients had common social links through visits to bars in two different areas. With the exception of the first case, there was an absence of zoonotic links or consumption of unpasteurised dairy products, suggesting that person-to-person transmission had occurred. INTERPRETATION: This report of several instances of M bovis transmission between people in a modern urban setting emphasises the need to maintain control measures for human and bovine tuberculosis. Transmission and subsequent disease was probably due to a combination of host and environmental factors. Prospective surveillance and DNA fingerprinting identified the cluster, enabling health protection teams to set up control measures and prevent further transmission.
BACKGROUND: Despite a recent resurgence in the incidence of bovinetuberculosis in UK cattle herds, no associated rise in the number of cases in man has been noted. Disease due to humanMycobacterium bovisinfection usually occurs in older patients, in whom drinking unpasteurised milk in the past is the probable source of infection. Person-to-person transmission is very rare. METHODS: After identification of two epidemiologically-linked cases of humanM bovis infection through routine laboratory and surveillance activities, all patients identified with M bovis infection in the Midlands from 2001-05 (n=20) were assessed by DNA fingerprinting (MIRU-VNTR and spoligotyping), with additional interviews for patients with a clustered strain. FINDINGS: A cluster of six cases was identified. All clustered cases were young and UK-born; five patients had pulmonary disease, and one patient died due to M bovis meningitis, with four patients possessing factors predisposing to tuberculosis. All patients had common social links through visits to bars in two different areas. With the exception of the first case, there was an absence of zoonotic links or consumption of unpasteurised dairy products, suggesting that person-to-person transmission had occurred. INTERPRETATION: This report of several instances of M bovis transmission between people in a modern urban setting emphasises the need to maintain control measures for human and bovinetuberculosis. Transmission and subsequent disease was probably due to a combination of host and environmental factors. Prospective surveillance and DNA fingerprinting identified the cluster, enabling health protection teams to set up control measures and prevent further transmission.
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