| Literature DB >> 25928467 |
Janine K Runfola, Jennifer House, Lisa Miller, Leah Colton, Donna Hite, Alex Hawley, Paul Mead, Martin Schriefer, Jeannine Petersen, Colleen Casaceli, Kristine M Erlandson, Clayton Foster, Kristy L Pabilonia, Gary Mason, John M Douglas.
Abstract
On July 8, 2014, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) laboratory identified Yersinia pestis, the bacterium that causes plague, in a blood specimen collected from a man (patient A) hospitalized with pneumonia. The organism had been previously misidentified as Pseudomonas luteola by an automated system in the hospital laboratory. An investigation led by Tri-County Health Department (TCHD) revealed that patient A's dog had died recently with hemoptysis. Three other persons who had contact with the dog, one of whom also had contact with patient A, were ill with fever and respiratory symptoms, including two with radiographic evidence of pneumonia. Specimens from the dog and all three human contacts yielded evidence of acute Y. pestis infection. One of the pneumonia cases might have resulted through human-to-human transmission from patient A, which would be the first such event reported in the United States since 1924. This outbreak highlights 1) the need to consider plague in the differential diagnosis of ill domestic animals, including dogs, in areas where plague is endemic; 2) the limitations of automated diagnostic systems for identifying rare bacteria such as Y. pestis; and 3) the potential for milder plague illness in patients taking antimicrobial agents. Hospital laboratorians should be aware of the limitations of automated identification systems, and clinicians should suspect plague in patients with clinically compatible symptoms from whom P. luteola is isolated.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25928467 PMCID: PMC4584809
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
FIGURETimeline of diagnoses and treatment for patients identified in a pneumonic plague outbreak — Colorado, 2014
Dates of exposure and illness onset and test results for patients identified in a pneumonic plague outbreak — Colorado, June–July 2014
| Patient | Date of exposure (source) | Onset of illness | Chest radiograph findings | Hospitalized | Laboratory test results | ||||||||||
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| Polymerase chain reaction | Culture | Serologic testing | |||||||||||||
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| Initial | Follow-up | ||||||||||||||
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| Specimen | Date | +/− | Specimen | Date | +/− | Specimen | Date | Titer | Date | Titer | |||||
| Dog | Unknown | June 24 | PNA | Yes | Liver/lung tissue | June 26 | + | Liver/lung tissue | June 26 | + | NT | NT | NT | NT | NT |
| A | June 25 | June 28 | PNA | Yes | Blood | June 29 | + | Blood | June 29 | + | NT | NT | NT | NT | NT |
| B | June 25 | June 30 | PNA | No | Sputum | July 10 | + | Sputum, blood | July 10 | − | Blood | July 10 | 1:64 | July 24 | 1:64 |
| Jan 12 2015 | 1:256 | ||||||||||||||
| C | June 25 | July 4 | no evidence of PNA | No | Blood | July 9 | − | Blood | July 9 | − | Blood | July 9 | 1:32 | July 24 | 1:32 |
| Jan 12 2015 | − | ||||||||||||||
| D | June 25 (dog) | July 5 | PNA | Yes | Blood | July 6 | − | Blood | July 6 | − | Blood | July 6 | − | July 12 | 1:32 |
| June 29 (patient A) | July 23 | 1:32 | |||||||||||||
Abbreviations: PNA = pneumonia; + = positive test result; − = negative test result; NT = not tested.