| Literature DB >> 27983489 |
Yu Li, Wenwu Yin, Martin Hugh-Jones, Liping Wang, Di Mu, Xiang Ren, Lingjia Zeng, Qiulan Chen, Wei Li, Jianchun Wei, Shengjie Lai, Hang Zhou, Hongjie Yu.
Abstract
Using national surveillance data for 120,111 human anthrax cases recorded during 1955-2014, we analyzed the temporal, seasonal, geographic, and demographic distribution of this disease in China. After 1978, incidence decreased until 2013, when it reached a low of 0.014 cases/100,000 population. The case-fatality rate, cumulatively 3.6% during the study period, has also decreased since 1990. Cases occurred throughout the year, peaking in August. Geographic distribution decreased overall from west to east, but the cumulative number of affected counties increased during 2005-2014. The disease has shifted from industrial to agricultural workers; 86.7% of cases occurred in farmers and herdsmen. Most (97.7%) reported cases were the cutaneous form. Although progress has been made in reducing incidence, this study highlights areas that need improvement. Adequate laboratory diagnosis is lacking; only 7.6% of cases received laboratory confirmation. Geographic expansion of the disease indicates that livestock control programs will be essential in eradicating anthrax.Entities:
Keywords: Bacillus anthracis; China; anthrax; bacteria; bioterrorism and preparedness; case-fatality rate; cases; epidemiology; human anthrax; respiratory infections; zoonoses
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27983489 PMCID: PMC5176222 DOI: 10.3201/eid2301.150947
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Cases of and deaths from probable and confirmed human anthrax, China, 1955–2014. A) No. human anthrax cases (n = 120,111) and incidence rate (no. cases/100,000 population) by year. B) No. human anthrax deaths (n = 4,341) and case-fatality rate (%) by year.
Figure 2Monthly distribution of probable and confirmed human anthrax cases, China, 1955–2014.
Figure 3Provincial distribution of probable and confirmed human anthrax cases, China, 1955–2014.
Figure 4Trends in number of counties affected by probable and confirmed human anthrax, China, 2005–2014.
Figure 5Geographic distribution of counties affected by probable and confirmed human anthrax, China, 2005–2014.
Demographic and diagnostic characteristics of patients with human anthrax, by diagnosis type, China, 2005–2014*
| Characteristic | Probable cases, n = 3,121 | Confirmed cases, n = 258 | Total, n = 3,379 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | |||
| M | 2,273 (72.8) | 210 (81.4) | 2,483 (73.5) |
| F | 848 (27.2) | 48 (18.6) | 896 (26.5) |
| Median age, y, (IQR) | 38 (27–49) | 40 (30–49) | 38 (27–49) |
| Age group, y | |||
| 0–14 | 229 (7.3) | 11 (4.3) | 240 (7.1) |
| 15–19 | 158 (5.1) | 8 (3.1) | 166 (4.9) |
| 20–24 | 230 (7.4) | 20 (7.8) | 250 (7.4) |
| 25–29 | 309 (9.9) | 25 (9.7) | 334 (9.9) |
| 30–34 | 352 (11.3) | 24 (9.3) | 376 (11.1) |
| 35–39 | 415 (13.3) | 34 (13.2) | 449 (13.3) |
| 40–44 | 379 (12.1) | 39 (15.1) | 418 (12.4) |
| 45–49 | 282 (9.0) | 38 (14.7) | 320 (9.5) |
| 50–54 | 212 (6.8) | 18 (7.0) | 230 (6.8) |
| 55–59 | 201 (6.4) | 22 (8.5) | 223 (6.6) |
| 60–64 | 167 (5.4) | 11 (4.3) | 178 (5.3) |
|
| 187 (6.0) | 8 (3.1) | 195 (5.8) |
| Occupation | |||
| Farmer or herdsman | 2,700 (86.5) | 231 (89.5) | 2,931 (86.7) |
| Infants or students† | 248 (7.9) | 12 (4.7) | 260 (7.7) |
| Other‡ | 173 (5.5) | 15 (5.8) | 188 (5.6) |
| Rural residence§ | 2,889 (92.6) | 234 (90.7) | 3,123 (92.4) |
| Fatal outcome | 36 (1.2) | 5 (1.9) | 41 (1.2) |
| Clinical forms | |||
| Cutaneous | 3,055 (97.9) | 252 (97.7) | 3,307 (97.9) |
| Inhalational | 0 | 1 (0.4) | 1 (0.0) |
| Gastrointestinal | 5 (0.2) | 1 (0.4) | 6 (0.2) |
| Unknown¶ | 61 (2.0) | 4 (1.6) | 65 (1.9) |
| Median onset to diagnosis interval, d (IQR) | 4.0 (2.0–6.7) | 5.0 (3.0–8.3) | 4.0 (2.4–7.0) |
| Year of illness onset | |||
| 2005 | 497 (15.9) | 38 (14.7) | 535 (15.8) |
| 2006 | 417 (13.4) | 35 (13.6) | 452 (13.4) |
| 2007 | 400 (12.8) | 26 (10.1) | 426 (12.6) |
| 2008 | 309 (9.9) | 29 (11.2) | 338 (10.0) |
| 2009 | 334 (10.7) | 17 (6.6) | 351 (10.4) |
| 2010 | 265 (8.5) | 25 (9.7) | 290 (8.6) |
| 2011 | 279 (8.9) | 30 (11.6) | 309 (9.1) |
| 2012 | 220 (7.1) | 17 (6.6) | 237 (7.0) |
| 2013 | 181 (5.8) | 12 (4.7) | 193 (5.7) |
| 2014 | 219 (7.0) | 29 (11.2) | 248 (7.3) |
*Values are no. (%) unless otherwise indicated. Percentages may not total 100 because of rounding. IQR, interquartile range. †Infants include children attending and not attending kindergarten. Students include primary, secondary, and college students. ‡Includes teacher, laborers, self-employed and unemployed, workers, food industry personnel, retired persons, and cadres of staff. §If the residence community was connected to seats of county or municipal government through public facilities, residence facilities and other facilities, or mine area, development zone, research institutes, higher education establishments, farming communities or tree farming communities with >3,000 of permanent residents, it was considered an urban residence. Otherwise, the community was considered a rural residence. ¶No information was available.