球虫菌病、组织浆菌病和芽生菌病的监测-美国,2019。

IF 37.3 1区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Dallas J Smith, Samantha L Williams, Kaitlin M Benedict, Brendan R Jackson, Mitsuru Toda
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引用次数: 9

摘要

问题/状况:球孢子菌病、组织胞浆菌病和芽生菌病是未被诊断的真菌疾病,通常类似细菌性或病毒性肺炎,可引起弥散性疾病和死亡。这些疾病是由吸入真菌孢子引起的,这些真菌孢子在环境中具有不同的地理生态位(例如土壤或灰尘),其分布极易受到气候变化的影响,例如球虫菌病在干旱地区的扩大,组织浆菌病的向北扩展,以及像纽约这样的地区报告了以前被认为是非地方性的孢子菌病病例。球孢子菌病、组织浆菌病和芽孢菌病的全国发病率特征不明显。报告期间:2019年。系统描述:国家法定疾病监测系统(NNDSS)跟踪球孢子菌病病例,这是由26个州和哥伦比亚特区向疾病预防控制中心报告的一种全国性法定疾病。组织胞浆菌病和芽生菌病都不是国家通报的疾病;然而,13个州报告了组织胞浆菌病,5个州报告了芽生菌病。卫生部门根据国家和地区流行病学家委员会确定的定义对病例进行分类。结果:2019年共向疾病预防控制中心报告球虫菌病确诊病例20,061例,组织浆菌病确诊和疑似病例1,124例,囊胚菌病确诊和疑似病例240例。亚利桑那州和加利福尼亚州报告了97%的球孢子菌病病例,明尼苏达州和威斯康星州报告了75%的芽孢菌病病例。伊利诺伊州报告的组织胞浆菌病病例比例最高(26%)。这三种疾病在男性中更为常见,芽孢菌病的比例(70%)大大高于组织浆菌病(56%)或球孢子菌病(52%)。与非西班牙裔美国印第安人或阿拉斯加原住民(AI/AN)相比,非西班牙裔美国印第安人或阿拉斯加原住民(AI/AN)的球虫病发病率大约高出4倍(每10万人17.3人),西班牙裔或拉丁裔人(11.2人)的球虫病发病率几乎是非西班牙裔白人(4.1人)的3倍。组织胞浆菌病的发病率在种族和民族类别中相似(范围:0.9-1.3)。与白人(0.7)相比,AI/AN人群的芽孢菌病发病率大约是白人的6倍(4.5),非西班牙裔亚洲人和夏威夷原住民或其他太平洋岛民(1.6)的发病率大约是白人的2倍(0.7)。超过一半的组织胞浆菌病(54%)和芽生菌病(65%)患者住院,5%的组织胞浆菌病和9%的芽生菌病患者死亡。在球孢子菌病未流行的州,春季(3月、4月和5月)的病例数比其他季节多,而组织胞浆菌病的病例数在秋季(9月、10月和11月)和芽孢菌病的病例数在冬季(12月、1月和2月)略有高峰。解释:球虫菌病、组织浆菌病和芽生菌病是发生在美国地理生态位的疾病。这些疾病会导致严重的疾病,2019年报告的球孢子菌病病例约为2万例。虽然组织胞浆菌病和芽生菌病的报告病例少得多,但监测却有限得多,而且很可能存在诊断不足的情况,高住院率和高死亡率就是明证。这表明,症状较轻的人可能不会寻求医疗评估,症状会自行消退,或者疾病被误诊为其他更常见的呼吸系统疾病。公共卫生行动:有必要改进监测,以更好地确定球孢子菌病的严重程度,并改进组织浆菌病和芽孢菌病的检测。这些发现可能指导改进检测实践,使真菌疾病能够及时诊断和治疗。临床医生和卫生保健专业人员应在社区获得性肺炎或其他下呼吸道急性感染患者中考虑球虫菌病、组织浆菌病和芽生菌病,这些患者居住或曾到过已知环境中存在致病真菌的地区。适合文化的量身定制的教育信息可能有助于改善诊断和治疗。对这三种疾病的公共卫生应对受到阻碍,因为从国家常规监测中收集的信息不包括风险人群和接触源的数据。更广泛的监测,包括扩展到其他州,以及关于潜在暴露和相关宿主因素的更详细信息,可以描述流行趋势、危险人群和疾病预防策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Surveillance for Coccidioidomycosis, Histoplasmosis, and Blastomycosis - United States, 2019.

Surveillance for Coccidioidomycosis, Histoplasmosis, and Blastomycosis - United States, 2019.

Surveillance for Coccidioidomycosis, Histoplasmosis, and Blastomycosis - United States, 2019.

Surveillance for Coccidioidomycosis, Histoplasmosis, and Blastomycosis - United States, 2019.

Problem/condition: Coccidioidomycosis, histoplasmosis, and blastomycosis are underdiagnosed fungal diseases that often mimic bacterial or viral pneumonia and can cause disseminated disease and death. These diseases are caused by inhalation of fungal spores that have distinct geographic niches in the environment (e.g., soil or dust), and distribution is highly susceptible to climate changes such as expanding arid regions for coccidioidomycosis, the northward expansion of histoplasmosis, and areas like New York reporting cases of blastomycosis previously thought to be nonendemic. The national incidence of coccidioidomycosis, histoplasmosis, and blastomycosis is poorly characterized.

Reporting period: 2019.

Description of system: The National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS) tracks cases of coccidioidomycosis, a nationally notifiable condition reported to CDC by 26 states and the District of Columbia. Neither histoplasmosis nor blastomycosis is a nationally notifiable condition; however, histoplasmosis is voluntarily reported in 13 states and blastomycosis in five states. Health departments classify cases based on the definitions established by the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists.

Results: In 2019, a total of 20,061 confirmed coccidioidomycosis, 1,124 confirmed and probable histoplasmosis, and 240 confirmed and probable blastomycosis cases were reported to CDC. Arizona and California reported 97% of coccidioidomycosis cases, and Minnesota and Wisconsin reported 75% of blastomycosis cases. Illinois reported the greatest percentage (26%) of histoplasmosis cases. All three diseases were more common among males, and the proportion for blastomycosis (70%) was substantially higher than for histoplasmosis (56%) or coccidioidomycosis (52%). Coccidioidomycosis incidence was approximately four times higher for non-Hispanic American Indian or Alaska Native (AI/AN) persons (17.3 per 100,000 population) and almost three times higher for Hispanic or Latino persons (11.2) compared with non-Hispanic White (White) persons (4.1). Histoplasmosis incidence was similar across racial and ethnic categories (range: 0.9-1.3). Blastomycosis incidence was approximately six times as high among AI/AN persons (4.5) and approximately twice as high among non-Hispanic Asian and Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander persons (1.6) compared with White persons (0.7). More than one half of histoplasmosis (54%) and blastomycosis (65%) patients were hospitalized, and 5% of histoplasmosis and 9% of blastomycosis patients died. States in which coccidioidomycosis is not known to be endemic had more cases in spring (March, April, and May) than during other seasons, whereas the number of cases peaked slightly in autumn (September, October, and November) for histoplasmosis and in winter (December, January, and February) for blastomycosis.

Interpretation: Coccidioidomycosis, histoplasmosis, and blastomycosis are diseases occurring in geographical niches within the United States. These diseases cause substantial illness, with approximately 20,000 coccidioidomycosis cases reported in 2019. Although substantially fewer histoplasmosis and blastomycosis cases were reported, surveillance was much more limited and underdiagnosis was likely, as evidenced by high hospitalization and death rates. This suggests that persons with milder symptoms might not seek medical evaluation and the symptoms self-resolve or the illnesses are misdiagnosed as other, more common respiratory diseases.

Public health action: Improved surveillance is necessary to better characterize coccidioidomycosis severity and to improve detection of histoplasmosis and blastomycosis. These findings might guide improvements in testing practices that enable timely diagnosis and treatment of fungal diseases. Clinicians and health care professionals should consider coccidioidomycosis, histoplasmosis, and blastomycosis in patients with community-acquired pneumonia or other acute infections of the lower respiratory tract who live in or have traveled to areas where the causative fungi are known to be present in the environment. Culturally appropriate tailored educational messages might help improve diagnosis and treatment. Public health response to these three diseases is hindered because information gathered from states' routine surveillance does not include data on populations at risk and sources of exposure. Broader surveillance that includes expansion to other states, and more detail about potential exposures and relevant host factors can describe epidemiologic trends, populations at risk, and disease prevention strategies.

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来源期刊
Mmwr Surveillance Summaries
Mmwr Surveillance Summaries PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
60.50
自引率
1.20%
发文量
9
期刊介绍: The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) Series, produced by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), is commonly referred to as "the voice of CDC." Serving as the primary outlet for timely, reliable, authoritative, accurate, objective, and practical public health information and recommendations, the MMWR is a crucial publication. Its readership primarily includes physicians, nurses, public health practitioners, epidemiologists, scientists, researchers, educators, and laboratorians.
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