| Literature DB >> 30280689 |
David Edwards1, Dianne Kent1, Caroline Lester1, Colin Stewart Brown2, Michael E Murphy3, Nicholas M Brown4, Olajumoke Sule4, Alexandra Itani5, Meera Chand6, Amy Trindall7, Callum Pearson7, Iain Roddick7, Norman K Fry2, Jorg Hoffmann1, Nalini Iyanger2, Laurence Kemp5, Joanne White2, Babak Javid8, Isobel D Ramsay8, Dominik Zenner2, Aliko Ahmed1, Gayatri Amirthalingam9, Sultan Salimee1, David Litt2, Mark Reacher7.
Abstract
In early 2017, a United Kingdom (UK)-born person in their 20s presented with a skin ulcer on the foot 3 weeks after returning from Ghana. The patient had last received a diphtheria-containing vaccine in 2013, completing the recommended course. MALDI-TOF of a cutaneous swab identified Corynebacterium diphtheriae. Real-time PCR ascertained the species and presence of the diphtheria toxin gene. An Elek test confirmed toxigenicity. The isolate was macrolide sensitive and penicillin resistant. The local Public Health England (PHE) Health Protection Team obtained the patient's clinical history and traced contacts to inform appropriate public health action. One close contact (in their early 80s with uncertain immunisation status who had not recently travelled) had a positive throat swab for toxigenic C. diphtheriae and reported a history of mild coryzal symptoms. Multilocus sequence typing revealed that strains from the index case and contact had Sequence Type 463. Diphtheria is extremely rare in the UK due to high vaccine coverage and this is the first documented transmission in 30 years. Clinicians and laboratory staff should remain highly suspicious of lesions in overseas travellers, even when patients are fully vaccinated. Older individuals who might not have completed a full immunisation course may have higher diphtheria susceptibility.Entities:
Keywords: Corynebacterium diphtheriae; corynebacterium infection; health protection; outbreak; toxigenic; vaccine-preventable diseases
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30280689 PMCID: PMC6169202 DOI: 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2018.23.39.1700681
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Euro Surveill ISSN: 1025-496X
FigureTimeline of swab samples and test results for toxin-positive Corynebacterium diphtheriae cases and close contactsa, East of England, January–March 2017 (n = 13)
Demographics and immunisation status with diphtheria toxin vaccine for toxin-positive Corynebacterium diphtheriae cases (n = 2) and their close contactsa (n = 11), East of England, January–March 2017
| Relationship to case | Age group in years | PPE worn | Reported doses of diphtheria containing vaccine receivedb | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case 1 contacts | Case 1 | 11–20 | NA | Five |
| Case 2 | 81–90 | NA | No record of any doses received | |
| Non-GP practice contact 2 | 21–30 | No | Five | |
| Non-GP practice contact 3 | 51–60 | No | No record of any doses received | |
| Non-GP practice contact 4; HCW | 41–50 | No | Five | |
| GP practice contact HCW 1 | 31–40 | No | No vaccination information obtained | |
| GP practice contact HCW 2 | 31–40 | Unknown | No vaccination information obtained | |
| GP practice contact HCW 3 | 41–50 | No | No vaccination information obtained | |
| GP practice contact HCW 4 | 51–60 | No | Five | |
| GP practice contact HCW 5 | 51–60 | No | Five | |
| Case 2 contacts | Non-GP practice contact | 41–50 | No | One |
| GP practice contact HCW 6 | 51–60 | No | No vaccination information obtained | |
| GP practice contact HCW 7 | 41–50 | No | One | |
HCW: healthcare worker; NA: not applicable; PPE: personal protective equipment.