| Literature DB >> 30155747 |
Van-Thuan Hoang1,2, Philippe Gautret3.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Mass gatherings (MGs) are characterized by a high concentration of people at a specific time and location. Infectious diseases are of particular concern at MGs. The aim of this review was to summarize findings in the field of infectious diseases with a variety of pathogens associated with international MGs in the last 5 years. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Festival; Hajj; Infectious diseases; Mass gatherings; Outbreaks; Sport
Year: 2018 PMID: 30155747 PMCID: PMC7088693 DOI: 10.1007/s11908-018-0650-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Infect Dis Rep ISSN: 1523-3847 Impact factor: 3.725
Respiratory tract infections at the Hajj
| Date of study | Clinical setting | Clinical findings | Number of pilgrims/cases | Pathogens isolated | Comments/highlights | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | Retrospective survey of medical data registered by Iranian caravan physicians at Mecca, Medina, Arafat, and Mina, Saudi Arabia | RTIs 61.82%, cough 24%, rhinorrhea 19% | 107,074 ill Iranian pilgrims | RTIs were the most diagnosed diseases | [ | |
| 2013–2015 | Survey conducted among ill returning pilgrims presenting to hospitals in the Midlands South West and North England, UK | 202 UK pilgrims with RTI | 14.4% HRV, 13.9% IAV, 6.4% IBV, 5.0% PIV virus | [ | ||
| 2013–2016 | In-patient of a survey admitted to the Kurmitola General Hospital isolation unit, Dhaka, Bangladesh | 81 Bengali pilgrims hospitalized with RTIs | 12.3% IAV, 10% IBV, 2.8% ADV, 2.8% MPV, 2.8% PIV | [ | ||
| 2014 | Survey conducted among ill returning pilgrims consulting at 12 hospitals in Jordan | 76% cough, 50% sore throat, 41% fever, 37% rhinorrhea, 16% dyspnea | 125 Jordan pilgrims with RTIs | 47% HRV/EV, 12.8% HCoV and 3% IAV | [ | |
| 2014 | Cross-sectional study conducted at primary health care services of the Al Noor Specialized Hospital in Medina, Saudi Arabia | 66.8% acute rhinosinusitis | 343 ill hospitalized pilgrims with RTI | 93 (41.2%) bacterial rhinosinusitis, including 49.5% | [ | |
| 2014–2015 | Cross-sectional survey conducted in returning Hajj and Umrah pilgrims with current respiratory symptoms or fever arriving from Mecca and landing at Srinagar Airport, India. Study based on face-to-face interview | 89.7% cough, 86.3% rhinorrhea, 66.2% sore throat, 49.8% fever | 300 Indian pilgrims | 11% influenza virus | [ | |
| 2016 | Cross-sectional study conducted at an Indian medical mission in Mecca, Medina and Jeddah, Saudi Arabia | 930 ill pilgrims needed secondary care, of whom 585 (62.9%) were hospitalized. | 374,475 ill Indian pilgrims | Infectious diseases were most commonly due to overwhelming respiratory infections (49.4%) | [ | |
| 2013–2016 | Cross-sectional survey conducted in pilgrims admitted to Iranian hospitals on returning from the Hajj | 3840 Iranian pilgrims hospitalized with severe acute respiratory infections | 13% influenza virus | [ | ||
| 2004–2013 | Retrospective cohort study conducted at Al-Ansar general hospital, Medina, Saudi Arabia | 59.2% productive cough, 30.1% dry cough, 44.7% dyspnea, 26.8% sore throat. 31% admitted in ICU. | 1059 hospitalized pilgrims with pneumonia (23% of total hospital admissions) | Organisms isolated from sputum cultures: 36.1% | The mortality rate was 2.4% in the ward and 21.45% in the ICU | [ |
| 2013 | Cross-sectional study conducted at 15 healthcare facilities of Mecca and Medina, Saudi Arabia | 38 pilgrims hospitalized with bilateral pneumonia | 57.7% HRV, 23.1% IAV, 19.2% HCoV, 57.7% | [ | ||
| 2016 | Prospective survey conducted in 13 hospitals in Mecca and Medina, Saudi Arabia | 91% cough, 87.2% difficulty breathing, 32.3% chest pain 83.1% fever, 79.4% tachypnea | 266 hospitalized pilgrims with confirmed community-acquired pneumonia | 19% | [ | |
| 2004–2009 | Longitudinal survey conducted in pilgrims recruited at 1352 Hajj caravans. Study based on medical evaluation during travel | 71.2% RTIs, 10.7% ILI, 0.5% pneumonia | 254,823 Iranian pilgrims | 357 samples tested were positive for respiratory bacteria with 15.8% 105 pairs of pharyngeal samples tested were positive for respiratory virus with 36.2% ADV, 30% HRV, 20% IVB, 1.9% RSV | [ | |
| 2009 | Longitudinal survey conducted in pilgrims recruited at primary healthcare centers in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (for the mandatory pre-Hajj meningococcal vaccination). Study based on telephone interview on return | 53% RTIs | 1507 pilgrims | RTIs were leading cause of consultation (97% of ill pilgrims) | [ | |
| 2010 | Cross-sectional study conducted at Jeddah airport | 1600 pilgrims | 7.5% IAV | [ | ||
| 2012 | Longitudinal survey conducted in pilgrims recruited at a specialized Hajj travel agency, Marseille, France. Study based on medical evaluation during travel | 169 French pilgrims | The overall acquisition of nasal | [ | ||
| 2012–2014 | Longitudinal survey conducted in pilgrims recruited at a specialized Hajj travel agency, Marseille, France. Study based on medical evaluation during travel | 80.9% cough, 46.2% ILI, 91% sore throat, 78.7% rhinorrhea, 63.0% voice failure, 21.0% dyspnea | 382 French pilgrims | The prevalence of cough was significantly higher among females than men. Pilgrims with chronic respiratory disease showed a slightly increased prevalence of cough. | [ | |
| 2012–2015 | Cross-sectional study conducted at Cairo International Airport, Egypt | 30.4% reported symptoms consistent with ILI 14.5% laboratory-confirmed influenza | 3364 Egyptian pilgrims | 14.5% influenza including, 3.5% H1N1, 5.6% H3N2, 5.4% IBV | [ | |
| 2013 | Longitudinal survey conducted in pilgrims recruited at a specialized Hajj travel agency, Marseille, France. Study based on medical evaluation during travel | Cough 86.8% Sore throat 82.9%, ILI 47.3%, | 129 French pilgrims | HRV, HCoV-E229 and IAV prevalence was 13.5%, 12.4% and 7.8%, respectively. Of note, 36.6% of pilgrims acquired | [ | |
| 2013 | Prospective cohort study conducted among pilgrims recruited at King Abdul Aziz International airport Jeddah and Mina, Saudi Arabia | 1175 pilgrims | The carriage rate of | [ | ||
| 2013 | Cross-sectional survey conducted in pilgrims recruited at Mina encampment. Study based on post-Hajj face-to-face interview | 63.4% ILI, 46.3% cough, 34.7% sore throat, 23.8% rhinorrhea | 164 Australian pilgrims | 25% HRV, 4% IAV, 2% HCoV | [ | |
| 2013 | Cross-sectional survey (unpaired cohort) and longitudinal survey (paired cohort) conducted in pilgrims recruited on arrival at Jeddah airport. Study based on post-Hajj face-to-face interview conducted at Mina | 62% ILI | 1676 pilgrims | The acquisition rates of HRV, human coronavirus E229 (HCoV-E229) and IAV was 34.1%, 14.6%, and 1.9%, respectively and acquisition rates of | [ | |
| 2013 | Cross-sectional survey conducted in pilgrims recruited at a Hajj course at Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM), Kelantan, Malaysia, at Hajj building complex, Malaysia and in Mecca, Saudi Arabia. Study based on post-Hajj self-questionnaires collected on return | 93.4% respiratory symptoms 78.2% ILI 2.1% hospitalization | 468 Malaysian pilgrims | Most of pilgrims acquired the infection intensely at Arafat (81.2%) | [ | |
| 2013–2015 | Longitudinal survey conducted in returning Hajj pilgrims arriving at Xinjiang and Gansu airports, China | ILI, 1.9% | 847 Chinese pilgrims | 4.0% IAV, 1.7% IBV, 0.5% MPV, 0.2% RSV | [ | |
| 2016 | Prospective multisite cohort study conducted in pilgrims recruited in 4 cities of India | 76% pilgrims had at least one respiratory symptoms, cough 60.6%, sore throat 25.0% | 807 Indian pilgrims | 28% were positive for | None of the participants reported receiving the pneumococcal vaccine | [ |
RTIs respiratory tract infections, ILI influenza-like illness, ICU intensive care unit, S. aureus Staphylococcus aureus, S. pneumoniae Streptococcus pneumoniae, K. pneumoniae Klebsiella pneumoniae, H. influenzae Haemophilus influenzae, P. aeruginosa: Pseudomonas aeruginosa, C. pneumoniae: Chlamydia pneumoniae, L. pneumophila: Legionella pneumophila, E. coli: Escherichia coli, MRSA methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus, HRV human rhinovirus, EV enterovirus, HCoV human coronavirus, IAV influenza A virus, IBV influenza B virus, PIV parainfluenza virus, RSV respiratory syncytial virus, ADV adenovirus, MPV metapneumovirus
Hajj and large-scale open-air festivals—key points
| Hajj—key points | |
| • Event: annual Muslim pilgrimage | |
| • Place: Mecca, Saudia Arabia | |
| • Population size: 2 million from 185 countries (high proportion of elderly pilgrims with co-morbidities) | |
| • Prevalence of respiratory symptoms in overall population of pilgrims: 50–93% | |
| • Pneumonia among the leading cause of admission in Saudi hospitals during the Hajj | |
| • Acquisition of respiratory pathogens: 13.5–34.1% rhinovirus, 12.4–14.6% non-MERS coronavirus, 1.9–7.8% influenza A virus, 7.1–36.6% | |
| • No case of MERS-CoV, | |
| • Antibiotic consumption in overall population of pilgrims: 45–61.8% | |
| • Prevalence of diarrhea: 1.1–23.3% | |
| • Hajj-associated diarrhea mostly due to bacteria including: | |
| • Evidence for acquisition of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria | |
| Large-scale open-air festivals—key points | |
| • Events: music festivals and other cultural festivals in various places in the world. | |
| • Population size: variable but usually less than 400,000 participants (mostly young participants) | |
| • Outbreaks of respiratory tract infections and gastrointestinal infections are regularly reported including notably measles and mumps, influenza, diarrhea due to bacterial and viral infections. |
Sport events—key points
| • Events: Summer and Winter Olympics, FIFA world cup, EURO football cup | |
| • Population size: variable 1–6 million attendees at largest events | |
| • Outbreaks of respiratory tract infections have been reported, notably measles and influenza | |
| • Gastrointestinal infections and diarrhea due to |