疟疾监测-美国,2016年。

IF 37.3 1区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Kimberly E Mace, Paul M Arguin, Naomi W Lucchi, Kathrine R Tan
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CDC reference laboratories provide diagnostic assistance and conduct antimalarial drug resistance marker testing on blood samples submitted by health care providers or local or state health departments. This report summarizes data from the integration of all NMSS and NNDSS cases, CDC reference laboratory reports, and CDC clinical consultations.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>CDC received reports of 2,078 confirmed malaria cases with onset of symptoms in 2016, including two congenital cases, three cryptic cases, and one case acquired through blood transfusion. The number of malaria cases diagnosed in the United States has been increasing since the mid-1970s. However, in 2015 a decrease occurred in the number of cases, specifically from the region of West Africa, likely due to altered travel related to the Ebola virus disease outbreak. The number of confirmed malaria cases in 2016 represents a 36% increase compared with 2015, and the 2016 total is 153 more cases than in 2011, which previously had the highest number of cases (1,925 cases). In 2016, a total of 1,729 cases originated from Africa, and 1,061 (61.4%) of these came from West Africa. P. falciparum accounted for the majority of the infections (1,419 [68.2%]), followed by P. vivax (251 [12.1%]). Fewer than 2% of patients were infected by two species (23 [1.1%]). The infecting species was not reported or was undetermined in 10.8% of cases. CDC provided diagnostic assistance for 12.1% of confirmed cases and tested 10.8% of specimens with P. falciparum infections for antimalarial resistance markers. Of the U.S. resident patients who reported reason for travel, 69.4% were travelers who were visiting friends and relatives. The proportion of U.S. residents with malaria who reported taking any chemoprophylaxis in 2016 (26.3%) was similar to that in 2015 (26.6%), and adherence was poor among those who took chemoprophylaxis. Among the 964 U.S. residents with malaria for whom information on chemoprophylaxis use and travel region were known, 94.0% of patients with malaria did not adhere to or did not take a CDC-recommended chemoprophylaxis regimen. Among 795 women with malaria, 50 were pregnant, and one had adhered to mefloquine chemoprophylaxis. Forty-one (2.0%) malaria cases occurred among U.S. military personnel in 2016, a comparable proportion to that in 2015 (23 cases [1.5%]). Among all reported cases in 2016, a total of 306 (14.7%) were classified as severe illnesses, and seven persons died. 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In 2016, more cases (absolute number) originated from regions of the world with widespread malaria transmission. Since the early 2000s, worldwide interventions to reduce malaria have been successful; however, progress has plateaued in recent years, the disease remains endemic in many regions, and the use of appropriate prevention measures by travelers remains inadequate.</p><p><strong>Public health actions: </strong>The best way to prevent malaria is to take chemoprophylaxis medication during travel to a country where malaria is endemic. Malaria infections can be fatal if not diagnosed and treated promptly with antimalarial medications appropriate for the patient's age and medical history, the likely country of malaria acquisition, and previous use of antimalarial chemoprophylaxis. In 2018, two tafenoquine-based antimalarials were approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in the United States. 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The number of confirmed malaria cases in 2016 represents a 36% increase compared with 2015, and the 2016 total is 153 more cases than in 2011, which previously had the highest number of cases (1,925 cases). In 2016, a total of 1,729 cases originated from Africa, and 1,061 (61.4%) of these came from West Africa. P. falciparum accounted for the majority of the infections (1,419 [68.2%]), followed by P. vivax (251 [12.1%]). Fewer than 2% of patients were infected by two species (23 [1.1%]). The infecting species was not reported or was undetermined in 10.8% of cases. CDC provided diagnostic assistance for 12.1% of confirmed cases and tested 10.8% of specimens with P. falciparum infections for antimalarial resistance markers. Of the U.S. resident patients who reported reason for travel, 69.4% were travelers who were visiting friends and relatives. The proportion of U.S. residents with malaria who reported taking any chemoprophylaxis in 2016 (26.3%) was similar to that in 2015 (26.6%), and adherence was poor among those who took chemoprophylaxis. Among the 964 U.S. residents with malaria for whom information on chemoprophylaxis use and travel region were known, 94.0% of patients with malaria did not adhere to or did not take a CDC-recommended chemoprophylaxis regimen. Among 795 women with malaria, 50 were pregnant, and one had adhered to mefloquine chemoprophylaxis. Forty-one (2.0%) malaria cases occurred among U.S. military personnel in 2016, a comparable proportion to that in 2015 (23 cases [1.5%]). Among all reported cases in 2016, a total of 306 (14.7%) were classified as severe illnesses, and seven persons died. 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In 2016, more cases (absolute number) originated from regions of the world with widespread malaria transmission. Since the early 2000s, worldwide interventions to reduce malaria have been successful; however, progress has plateaued in recent years, the disease remains endemic in many regions, and the use of appropriate prevention measures by travelers remains inadequate.</p><p><strong>Public health actions: </strong>The best way to prevent malaria is to take chemoprophylaxis medication during travel to a country where malaria is endemic. Malaria infections can be fatal if not diagnosed and treated promptly with antimalarial medications appropriate for the patient's age and medical history, the likely country of malaria acquisition, and previous use of antimalarial chemoprophylaxis. In 2018, two tafenoquine-based antimalarials were approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in the United States. 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引用次数: 54

摘要

问题/状况:人类疟疾是由疟原虫属红细胞内原生动物引起的。这些寄生虫通过受感染的雌性按蚊叮咬传播。在美国,大多数疟疾感染发生在前往疟疾持续传播地区的人群中。然而,没有出国旅行的人偶尔也会因接触受感染的血液制品、先天性传播、实验室接触或当地蚊子传播而感染疟疾。在美国进行疟疾监测是为了提供有关其发生的信息(例如,时间,地理和人口统计),指导旅行者和患者的预防和治疗建议,并在确定本地获得病例时促进传播控制措施。所涉期间:本报告总结了2016年发病人群中确诊的疟疾病例,并总结了前几年的趋势。系统描述:通过血膜显微镜、聚合酶链反应或快速诊断测试诊断的疟疾病例由卫生保健提供者或实验室工作人员报告给地方和州卫生部门。病例调查由地方和州卫生部门进行,报告通过国家疟疾监测系统(NMSS)、国家法定疾病监测系统(NNDSS)或疾病预防控制中心的直接咨询传递给疾病预防控制中心。疾病预防控制中心参考实验室提供诊断协助,并对卫生保健提供者或地方或州卫生部门提交的血液样本进行抗疟疾耐药性标记物检测。本报告总结了整合所有NMSS和NNDSS病例、CDC参考实验室报告和CDC临床咨询的数据。结果:2016年,美国疾病预防控制中心共报告出现症状的疟疾确诊病例2078例,其中先天性病例2例,隐性病例3例,经输血感染病例1例。自20世纪70年代中期以来,美国诊断出的疟疾病例数量一直在增加。然而,2015年病例数有所减少,特别是来自西非区域的病例数,这可能是由于与埃博拉病毒病爆发有关的旅行改变所致。2016年确诊的疟疾病例数比2015年增加了36%,2016年的病例总数比2011年多153例,而2011年是病例数最多的一年(1925例)。2016年,共有1729例病例源自非洲,其中1061例(61.4%)来自西非。恶性疟原虫感染最多(1419例[68.2%]),间日疟原虫次之(251例[12.1%])。两种病原菌感染不足2%(23例[1.1%])。10.8%的病例未报告或未确定感染物种。疾病预防控制中心为12.1%的确诊病例提供了诊断援助,并对10.8%的恶性疟原虫感染标本进行了抗疟标志物检测。在报告旅行原因的美国居民患者中,69.4%是探亲访友的旅行者。2016年报告服用化学预防药物的美国疟疾患者比例(26.3%)与2015年(26.6%)相似,服用化学预防药物的患者依从性较差。在964名美国疟疾患者中,已知化学预防使用和旅行地区的信息,94.0%的疟疾患者没有坚持或没有采取cdc推荐的化学预防方案。在795名患有疟疾的妇女中,有50人怀孕,1人坚持使用甲氟喹化学预防。2016年美军人员疟疾病例41例(2.0%),与2015年23例(1.5%)比例相当。在2016年报告的所有病例中,共有306例(14.7%)被列为严重疾病,7人死亡。2016年,疾病预防控制中心分析了144份恶性疟原虫阳性样本和9份恶性疟原虫混合种样本,用于监测抗疟标志物(尽管在一些样本中无法检测某些位点);发现与乙胺嘧啶耐药相关的遗传多态性142例(97.9%),磺胺多辛耐药98例(70.5%),氯喹耐药67例(44.7%),甲氟喹耐药6例(4.3%),阿托瓦酮耐药1例(解释:2016年报告的疟疾病例数延续了数十年来的增长趋势,是1972年以来的最高水平。疟疾的输入反映了往返疟疾流行地区的全球旅行趋势的总体增加;2015年,主要来自西非的感染病例出现了短暂减少。2016年,更多病例(绝对数字)源自世界上疟疾传播广泛的区域。 自21世纪初以来,减少疟疾的全球干预措施取得了成功;然而,近年来进展停滞不前,该病在许多地区仍然流行,旅行者使用适当的预防措施仍然不足。公共卫生行动:预防疟疾的最佳方法是在前往疟疾流行国家旅行时服用化学预防药物。如果不能根据患者的年龄和病史、可能感染疟疾的国家以及以前使用过抗疟化学预防药物,及时诊断和治疗疟疾感染可能是致命的。2018年,美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)批准了两种基于他非诺喹的抗疟药在美国使用。Arakoda被批准用于成人化学预防,每周服用一次,方便旅行,这可能会提高依从性,也可以预防间日疟原虫和卵形疟原虫感染的复发。Krintafel被批准用于根治16岁以上的间日疟原虫感染。2019年4月,静脉注射青蒿琥酯成为美国治疗严重疟疾的一线药物。由于静脉注射青蒿琥酯没有得到FDA的批准,它可以根据一项正在研究的新药方案从疾病预防控制中心获得。预防疟疾的详细建议可在疾控中心网站(https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/travelers/drugs.html)向公众提供。卫生保健提供者应查阅美国疾病控制与预防中心的疟疾治疗指南,并在需要时联系疾病控制与预防中心的疟疾热线以获得病例管理建议。疟疾治疗建议可在网上(https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/diagnosis_treatment)和疟疾热线(770-488-7788或免费电话855-856-4713)获得。提交疟疾病例报告的人员(护理提供者、实验室以及州和地方公共卫生官员)应提供完整的信息,因为不完整的报告会影响病例调查和预防感染以及检查疟疾病例趋势的努力。美国旅行者对推荐的疟疾预防策略的依从性很低;不坚持服药的原因包括离开疟疾流行地区后过早停止服药,忘记服药,以及出现副作用。抗疟药物耐药性标记的分子监测(https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/features/ars.html)使疾病预防控制中心能够在国内和国际上跟踪、指导治疗和管理疟疾寄生虫的耐药性。需要更多的样本来提高抗疟药耐药性分析的完整性;因此,疾病控制与预防中心要求在美国诊断出的所有疟疾病例都要提交血液样本。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Malaria Surveillance - United States, 2016.

Problem/condition: Malaria in humans is caused by intraerythrocytic protozoa of the genus Plasmodium. These parasites are transmitted by the bite of an infective female Anopheles species mosquito. The majority of malaria infections in the United States occur among persons who have traveled to regions with ongoing malaria transmission. However, malaria is occasionally acquired by persons who have not traveled out of the country through exposure to infected blood products, congenital transmission, laboratory exposure, or local mosquitoborne transmission. Malaria surveillance in the United States is conducted to provide information on its occurrence (e.g., temporal, geographic, and demographic), guide prevention and treatment recommendations for travelers and patients, and facilitate transmission control measures if locally acquired cases are identified.

Period covered: This report summarizes confirmed malaria cases in persons with onset of illness in 2016 and summarizes trends in previous years.

Description of system: Malaria cases diagnosed by blood film microscopy, polymerase chain reaction, or rapid diagnostic tests are reported to local and state health departments by health care providers or laboratory staff members. Case investigations are conducted by local and state health departments, and reports are transmitted to CDC through the National Malaria Surveillance System (NMSS), the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS), or direct CDC consultations. CDC reference laboratories provide diagnostic assistance and conduct antimalarial drug resistance marker testing on blood samples submitted by health care providers or local or state health departments. This report summarizes data from the integration of all NMSS and NNDSS cases, CDC reference laboratory reports, and CDC clinical consultations.

Results: CDC received reports of 2,078 confirmed malaria cases with onset of symptoms in 2016, including two congenital cases, three cryptic cases, and one case acquired through blood transfusion. The number of malaria cases diagnosed in the United States has been increasing since the mid-1970s. However, in 2015 a decrease occurred in the number of cases, specifically from the region of West Africa, likely due to altered travel related to the Ebola virus disease outbreak. The number of confirmed malaria cases in 2016 represents a 36% increase compared with 2015, and the 2016 total is 153 more cases than in 2011, which previously had the highest number of cases (1,925 cases). In 2016, a total of 1,729 cases originated from Africa, and 1,061 (61.4%) of these came from West Africa. P. falciparum accounted for the majority of the infections (1,419 [68.2%]), followed by P. vivax (251 [12.1%]). Fewer than 2% of patients were infected by two species (23 [1.1%]). The infecting species was not reported or was undetermined in 10.8% of cases. CDC provided diagnostic assistance for 12.1% of confirmed cases and tested 10.8% of specimens with P. falciparum infections for antimalarial resistance markers. Of the U.S. resident patients who reported reason for travel, 69.4% were travelers who were visiting friends and relatives. The proportion of U.S. residents with malaria who reported taking any chemoprophylaxis in 2016 (26.3%) was similar to that in 2015 (26.6%), and adherence was poor among those who took chemoprophylaxis. Among the 964 U.S. residents with malaria for whom information on chemoprophylaxis use and travel region were known, 94.0% of patients with malaria did not adhere to or did not take a CDC-recommended chemoprophylaxis regimen. Among 795 women with malaria, 50 were pregnant, and one had adhered to mefloquine chemoprophylaxis. Forty-one (2.0%) malaria cases occurred among U.S. military personnel in 2016, a comparable proportion to that in 2015 (23 cases [1.5%]). Among all reported cases in 2016, a total of 306 (14.7%) were classified as severe illnesses, and seven persons died. In 2016, CDC analyzed 144 P. falciparum-positive and nine P. falciparum mixed species samples for surveillance of antimalarial resistance markers (although certain loci were untestable in some samples); genetic polymorphisms associated with resistance to pyrimethamine were identified in 142 (97.9%), to sulfadoxine in 98 (70.5%), to chloroquine in 67 (44.7%), to mefloquine in six (4.3%), and to atovaquone in one (<1.0%). The completeness of key variables (e.g., species, country of acquisition, and resident status) was 79.4% in 2016 and 75.7% in 2015.

Interpretation: The number of reported malaria cases in 2016 continued a decades-long increasing trend and is the highest since 1972. The importation of malaria reflects the overall increase in global travel trends to and from areas where malaria is endemic; a transient decrease in the acquisition of cases, predominantly from West Africa, occurred in 2015. In 2016, more cases (absolute number) originated from regions of the world with widespread malaria transmission. Since the early 2000s, worldwide interventions to reduce malaria have been successful; however, progress has plateaued in recent years, the disease remains endemic in many regions, and the use of appropriate prevention measures by travelers remains inadequate.

Public health actions: The best way to prevent malaria is to take chemoprophylaxis medication during travel to a country where malaria is endemic. Malaria infections can be fatal if not diagnosed and treated promptly with antimalarial medications appropriate for the patient's age and medical history, the likely country of malaria acquisition, and previous use of antimalarial chemoprophylaxis. In 2018, two tafenoquine-based antimalarials were approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in the United States. Arakoda was approved for use by adults for chemoprophylaxis and is available as a weekly dosage that is convenient during travel, which might improve adherence and also can prevent relapses from P. vivax and P. ovale infections. Krintafel was approved for radical cure of P. vivax infections in those >16 years old. In April 2019, intravenous artesunate became the first-line medication for treatment of severe malaria in the United States. Because intravenous artesunate is not FDA approved, it is available from CDC under an investigational new drug protocol. Detailed recommendations for preventing malaria are available to the general public at the CDC website (https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/travelers/drugs.html). Health care providers should consult the CDC Guidelines for Treatment of Malaria in the United States and contact the CDC's Malaria Hotline for case management advice when needed. Malaria treatment recommendations are available online (https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/diagnosis_treatment) and from the Malaria Hotline (770-488-7788 or toll-free at 855-856-4713). Persons submitting malaria case reports (care providers, laboratories, and state and local public health officials) should provide complete information because incomplete reporting compromises case investigations and efforts to prevent infections and examine trends in malaria cases. Adherence to recommended malaria prevention strategies is low among U.S. travelers; reasons for nonadherence include prematurely stopping after leaving the area where malaria was endemic, forgetting to take the medication, and experiencing a side effect. Molecular surveillance of antimalarial drug resistance markers (https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/features/ars.html) enables CDC to track, guide treatment, and manage drug resistance in malaria parasites both domestically and internationally. More samples are needed to improve the completeness of antimalarial drug resistance analysis; therefore, CDC requests that blood specimens be submitted for all cases of malaria diagnosed in the United States.

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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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