| Literature DB >> 32568040 |
Tyler M Sharp, Teresa G Fisher, Kristin Long, Garry Coulson, Freddy A Medina, Carolyn Herzig, Mary Beth Koza, Jorge Muñoz-Jordán, Gabriela Paz-Bailey, Zack Moore, Carl Williams.
Abstract
Investigation of a dengue case in a laboratory worker in North Carolina, USA, revealed that the case-patient prepared high-titer dengue virus stocks soon before illness onset. Improper doffing of gloves with an open finger wound likely resulted in cutaneous exposure. This case reinforces recommendations for enhanced precautions when working with high-titer dengue virus.Entities:
Keywords: North Carolina; United States; biosafety; dengue; dengue virus; high-titer viruses; laboratory-acquired infection; viruses
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32568040 PMCID: PMC7323529 DOI: 10.3201/eid2607.191598
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Timeline of events surrounding a case of laboratory-acquired dengue virus infection, United States, 2018. ID, infectious disease; PCP, primary care physician.
Summary of diagnostic test results of serum specimens collected from a case-patient with laboratory-acquired DENV infection, United States, 2018*
| Specimen designation | Time of specimen collection† | rRT-PCR | NS1 ELISA | IgM ELISA | DENV IgG ELISA titer | Neutralizing antibody titer | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DENV-1 | DENV-2 | DENV-3 | DENV-4 | WNV | YFV | ||||||
| Baseline‡ | −1.5 y | NT | NT | NT | 1:40 | <20 | <20 | <20 | <20 | <20 | 40 |
| Acute‡ | 7 d | Neg | Pos | Pos | 1:163,840 | <80 | 160 | 640 | 640 | <80 | 160 |
| Early convalescent‡ | 28 d | NT | NT | Pos | 1:163,840 | 80 | 640 | 1280 | 320 | 40 | 80 |
| Late convalescent§ | 190 d | NT | NT | Pos | 1:40,960 | 40 | <20 | 160 | 160 | NT | NT |
*DENV, dengue virus; IgM ELISA, anti-DENV IgM antibody capture enzyme linked immunosorbent assay; NS1 ELISA, nonstructural protein 1 ELISA; NT, not tested; rRT-PCR, real-time reverse transcription PCR; WNV, West Nile virus; YFV, yellow fever virus. †Relative to illness onset. ‡Neutralizing antibody titers obtained by 90% plaque reduction neutralization test. §Neutralizing antibody titers obtained by recombinant microfluorescence reduction neutralization test.
Figure 2Depiction of improper protocol for doffing gloves the case-patient reported using while conducting a protocol for growth and purification of high-titer dengue virus, United States, 2018. The red X indicates the location of an open wound on the ring finger of the case-patient’s left hand.