| Literature DB >> 25811076 |
Philippe Gautret, Kira Harvey, Prativa Pandey, Poh Lian Lim, Karin Leder, Watcharapong Piyaphanee, Marc Shaw, Susan C McDonald, Eli Schwartz, Douglas H Esposito, Philippe Parola.
Abstract
Among travelers, rabies cases are rare, but animal bites are relatively common. To determine which travelers are at highest risk for rabies, we studied 2,697 travelers receiving care for animal-related exposures and requiring rabies postexposure prophylaxis at GeoSentinel clinics during 1997-2012. No specific demographic characteristics differentiated these travelers from other travelers seeking medical care, making it challenging to identify travelers who might benefit from reinforced pretravel rabies prevention counseling. Median travel duration was short for these travelers: 15 days for those seeking care after completion of travel and 20 days for those seeking care during travel. This finding contradicts the view that preexposure rabies vaccine recommendations should be partly based on longer travel durations. Over half of exposures occurred in Thailand, Indonesia, Nepal, China, and India. International travelers to rabies-endemic regions, particularly Asia, should be informed about potential rabies exposure and benefits of pretravel vaccination, regardless of demographics or length of stay.Entities:
Keywords: GeoSentinel; animal-related exposure; rabies; rabies virus; travel; viruses
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25811076 PMCID: PMC4378464 DOI: 10.3201/eid2104.141479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Characteristics of 2,697 patients who sought care for an animal exposure and received rabies postexposure prophylaxis at GeoSentinel Surveillance Network sites, January 1997–December 2012, by animal species*
| Patient characteristic | Animal | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dog | NHP | Cat | Bat | Other† | Total‡ | |
| No. patients | 1,618 | 638 | 271 | 46 | 126 | 2,697 |
| Male sex, no. (%) | 891 (55) | 269 (42) | 125 (46) | 21 (46) | 54 (43) | 1,360 (51) |
| Age, y, no. (%) | ||||||
|
| 160 (10) | 65 (10) | 50 (19) | 2 (4) | 14 (11) | 291 (11) |
| 15-44 | 1,027 (64) | 460 (72) | 151 (56) | 28 (61) | 75 (60) | 1,739 (65) |
| 45-64 | 340 (21) | 103 (16) | 56 (21) | 16 (35) | 33 (26) | 548 (20) |
|
| 87 (5) | 9 (1) | 13 (5) | 0 | 4 (3) | 113 (4) |
| Reason for travel | ||||||
| Tourism | 1,016 (63) | 590 (92) | 183 (68) | 31 (67) | 89 (71) | 1,908 (71) |
| Visiting friends/relatives | 264 (16) | 6 (1) | 41 (15) | 1 (2) | 11 (9) | 323 (12) |
| Business | 206 (13) | 18 (3) | 25 (9) | 2 (4) | 13 (10) | 264 (10) |
| Missionary/volunteer/researcher/aid worker | 82 (5) | 15 (2) | 14 (5) | 7 (15) | 10 (8) | 127 (5) |
| Student | 36 (2) | 7 (1) | 7 (3) | 4 (9) | 3 (2) | 57 (2) |
| Other§ | 13 (1) | 2 (<1) | 1 (<1) | 1 (2) | 0 | 16 (1) |
| Region of exposure, no. (%)¶ | ||||||
| Southeast Asia | 570 (36) | 414 (66) | 99 (37) | 10 (22) | 37 (30) | 1,129 (43) |
| South-Central Asia | 406 (26) | 146 (23) | 21 (8) | 3 (7) | 22 (18) | 598 (23) |
| Northeastern Asia | 217 (14) | 13 (2) | 25 (9) | 0 | 6 (5) | 261 (10) |
| North Africa | 76 (5) | 6 (1) | 45 (17) | 1 (2) | 9 (7) | 137 (5) |
| Latin America | 121 (8) | 15 (2) | 7 (3) | 21 (46) | 10 (8) | 174 (7) |
| Sub-Saharan Africa | 55 (3) | 18 (3) | 16 (6) | 1 (2) | 16 (13) | 106 (4) |
| Middle East | 47 (3) | 3 (<1) | 38 (14) | 0 | 2 (2) | 90 (3) |
| Eastern Europe | 40 (3) | 2 (<1) | 4 (2) | 1 (2) | 4 (3) | 51 (2) |
| Western Europe | 28 (2) | 3 (<1) | 6 (2) | 4 (9) | 5 (4) | 46 (2) |
| Oceania | 14 (1) | 0 | 1 (<1) | 2 (4) | 1 (1) | 18 (1) |
| North America | 3 (<1) | 1 (<1) | 2 (1) | 3 (7) | 8 (6) | 17 (1) |
| Caribbean | 8 (1) | 2 (<1) | 2 (1) | 0 | 3 (2) | 15 (1) |
| Australia | 1 (<1) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 (2) | 3 (<1) |
*NHP, nonhuman primate. Data include 4 patients of unknown sex, 6 patients of unknown age, 4 patients of unknown country of residence, 52 patients whose region of exposure was unknown or unable to be ascertained, and 1 patient whose purpose of travel was unknown. †Bear (n = 1), camel (n = 1), Nasua spp. coatis (n = 4), cow (n = 1), donkey (n = 2), fox (n = 1), hamster (n = 2), horse (n = 5), human (n = 1), lion (n = 2), mongoose (n = 1), meercat (n = 2), mouse (n = 5), opossum (n = 1), rabbit (n = 2), raccoon (n = 2), rat (n = 12), rodent (n = 4), squirrel (n = 11), tiger (n = 6), and other, unspecified (n = 60). ‡Two patients were exposed to >1 animal; 1 patient was exposed to cat and dog, and 1 patient was exposed to dog and other (tiger). §This category includes immigration (n = 8), medical tourism (n = 8), and military (n = 1). ¶For explanation of GeoSentinel Surveillance Network regions, see Figure 2 (http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/ss6203a1.htm).
Countries with 5 highest levels of exposure among 2,697 patients who sought care for animal exposure and received rabies postexposure prophylaxis at GeoSentinel Surveillance Network sites, January 1997–December 2012, by animal species
| No. | Animal, country of exposure, no. (%) exposures | |||||
| Dog, n = 1,618 | NHP, n = 638 | Cat, n = 271 | Bat, n = 46 | Other, n = 126 | Total, n = 2,697 | |
| 1 | Thailand, 294 (18) | Indonesia, 200 (31) | Thailand, 59 (22) | Indonesia, 7 (15) | Thailand, 16 (13) | Thailand, 534 (20) |
| 2 | Nepal, 198 (12) | Thailand, 166 (26) | Turkey, 31 (11) | French Guyana, 5 (11) | India,10 (8) | Indonesia, 314 (12) |
| 3 | China, 197 (12) | Nepal, 82 (13) | China, 25 (9) | Peru, 4 (9) | Indonesia, 10 (8) | Nepal, 295 (10) |
| 4 | India, 124 (8) | India, 43 (7) | Indonesia, 17 (6) | Mexico, 3 (7) | China, 6 (5) | China, 241 (9) |
| 5 | Indonesia, 80 (5) | Vietnam, 21 (3) | Algeria, 15 (6) | Surinam, 3 (7) | Nepal, 6 (5) | India, 185 (7) |
Figure 1Monthly distribution of animal-related exposure cases requiring rabies postexposure prophylaxis, by exposure species, according to date of initial visit to GeoSentinel clinics, 1997–2012.
Figure 2Number of patients requiring rabies postexposure prophylaxis for animal-related exposure, by exposure species and by year and line of best fit for proportion of all GeoSentinel records accounted for by animal-related exposure requiring postexposure prophylaxis, 2003–2012. Limited to patients treated at GeoSentinel sites that were active contributors for the entire listed period. NHP, nonhuman primate. *Linear regression was used to calculate a line of best fit of y = 0.0015x + 0.006.
Characteristics of 3 patients with travel-associated rabies, GeoSentinel Surveillance Network, January 1997–December 2012
| Year (reference) | Age, y/sex | Citizenship | Reason for travel | Country (source) of exposure |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 ( | 65/M | Japan | Business (expatriate) | Philippines (dog bite) |
| 2012 ( | 41/M | Canada | Unknown | Island of Hispaniola (unknown)* |
| 2012 ( | 34/M | Israel | Tourism | India (unknown) |
*Although this patient’s place of exposure was initially described as being the Dominican Republic, the exact location or source of exposure could not be definitively determined; Hispaniola comprises Haiti and the Dominican Republic.