viernes, 28 de septiembre de 2012

Scarlet Fever Outbreak, Hong Kong, 2011 - - Emerging Infectious Disease journal - CDC

Scarlet Fever Outbreak, Hong Kong, 2011 - - Emerging Infectious Disease journal - CDC


Letter

Scarlet Fever Outbreak, Hong Kong, 2011

Suggested citation for this article
Figure
Thumbnail of Trends in scarlet fever during outbreak in Hong Kong, Guangdong, and Macau, People’s Republic of China, 2011. A) Monthly scarlet fever notifications in Hong Kong, Guangdong (data obtained from Department of Health Guangdong Province, www.gdwst.gov.cn/a/yiqingxx), and Macau (data obtained from Health Bureau, Government of the Macau Special Administrative Region (www.ssm.gov.mo/news/content/ch/1005/statistic.aspx). Vertical tick marks indicate January of each year. Data from GuangdongFigure. . Trends in scarlet fever during outbreak in Hong Kong, Guangdong, and Macau, People’s Republic of China, 2011. A) Monthly scarlet fever notifications in Hong Kong, Guangdong (data obtained from Department...
To the Editor: Scarlet fever is a notifiable disease in Hong Kong, Guangdong Province, and Macau in the People’s Republic of China. All 3 areas reported substantial increases in cases during 2011 (Figure, panel A). In Hong Kong, individual data, including age, geographic location, date of notification, and travel history within the incubation period, were collected from all locally notified scarlet fever case-patients. As of December 31, 2011, a total of 1,535 cases (21.7 cases/100,000 population) were reported, which was ≈10× higher than the average number of annual cases reported during the preceding 10 years (1). Of those, 730 cases were laboratory confirmed; 46 cases were imported; and 2 cases, 1 each in a 7-year-old girl and a 5-year-old boy co-infected with chickenpox, resulted in death (2).
Group A Streptococcus (GAS), the bacterium that causes scarlet fever, is mainly transmitted by direct contact with saliva and nasal fluids from infected persons (3). Many children can also carry GAS or be asymptomatically infected (4). A recent study in China showed that GAS is commonly resistant to macrolides and tetracycline but sensitive to penicillin, chloramphenicol, cefradine, and ofloxacin (5). In Hong Kong, GAS emm type 12 dominated among the isolates cultured during 2011 (6). Most of the cases reported were in children <10 1="1" 4="4" 6="6" age="age" data="data" distribution="distribution" during="during" interquartile="interquartile" is="is" median="median" month="month" not="not" of="of" p="p" previous="previous" range="range" reported="reported" shown="shown" similar="similar" that="that" the="the" to="to" years="years">In the United Kingdom during the mid-19th century, scarlet fever epidemics were found to follow a 5- to 6-year cycle, but this pattern disappeared as incidence decreased (7). Annual scarlet fever notifications in Hong Kong remained low during 2001–2010 (<4 a="a" and="and" antigenic="antigenic" any="any" apparent="apparent" attributable="attributable" be="be" cases="cases" demonstrate="demonstrate" did="did" drift="drift" fever="fever" gas="gas" href="http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/18/10/12-0062_article.htm#r8" in="in" increase="increase" long-term="long-term" might="might" not="not" notifications="notifications" of="of" pattern.="pattern." population="population" recent="recent" scarlet="scarlet" the="the" title="8" to="to" virulence="virulence">8
), or increased circulation of GAS. However, other than mandatory notification of medically attended case-patients, systematic laboratory testing of GAS isolates was not conducted in Hong Kong, and these possibilities could not be further investigated.Notifications of scarlet fever usually peak during December–March in Hong Kong, but the outbreak in 2011 peaked in June (Figure, panel B). The rise in scarlet fever cases in Guangdong Province and Macau slightly preceded that in Hong Kong; cases in Guangdong peaked in April (Figure, panel A). Maximum cross-correlations between spline-interpolated weekly scarlet fever notifications in Guangdong and Macau and those in Hong Kong were found at 1- and 2-week lags, respectively (ρ = 0.45 and 0.58) (Technical Appendix Adobe PDF file [PDF - 80 KB - 3 pages]).
In 2011, scarlet fever notification rates were elevated in all 4 regions of Hong Kong: New Territories East, New Territories West, Kowloon, and Hong Kong Island at 27.2, 21.7, 18.9, and 19.6 cases per 100,000 population, respectively. However, a distinctly higher proportion of imported cases before July 2011 (12 of 14, p value for exact binomial test = 0.01) were notified in New Territories East and New Territories West, where the main border crossings to mainland China are located. This finding suggests a link to the outbreak in Guangdong in these regions during the early phase of the local outbreak.
We estimated the instantaneous reproduction number (Rt), which measures the time-dependent frequency of transmission per single primary case (Technical Appendix Adobe PDF file [PDF - 80 KB - 3 pages]) (9). An Rt consistently >1 would indicate sustained local transmission. We estimated Rt on the basis of the daily scarlet fever notification data in different periods, adjusted for imported cases. For 19 cases (1.2% of all cases), we could not determine whether infection was local or imported. We estimated Rt in 2 different ways: either by assuming that all of these cases were local or by assuming that they all were imported, to represent possible extreme values of Rt. Rt fluctuated between 0.6 and 2.0 and was consistently >1 from mid-May through the end of June. Rt fell quickly to <1 21="21" 29="29" 2="2" a="a" after="after" and="and" beginning="beginning" c="c" cases="cases" class="noDecoration" community="community" concern="concern" early="early" education="education" fatal="fatal" fever="fever" health="health" heightened="heightened" href="http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/18/10/12-0062-techapp1.pdf" igure="igure" in="in" july="july" june="june" may="may" on="on" panel="panel" public="public" publicity="publicity" raised="raised" reported="reported" scarlet="scarlet" surveillance="surveillance" the="the" title="Technical Appendix" to="to" were="were" which="which" widespread="widespread">Technical Appendix Adobe PDF file [PDF - 80 KB - 3 pages]
) were implemented by the Centre for Health Protection in early June and could have contributed to the reduction in transmissibility. The health education measures included guidance on prevention and control measures, such as updates of antimicrobial drug resistance profile of GAS issued to all doctors and strengthening reporting of scarlet fever cases by child care centers and schools for prompt epidemiologic investigations.In summary, we analyzed the notification data of scarlet fever and investigated spatiotemporal spreading patterns of the disease with certain time lags in Hong Kong, Macau, and Guangdong. The estimated Rt in 2011 indicated the potential for local transmission and persistence. Such a borderless spread indicates a critical need to enhance cross-border communication and timely sharing of epidemic information so that future disease control efforts can be made at multiple geographic levels.
Eric H.Y. LauComments to Author , Hiroshi Nishiura, Benjamin J. Cowling, Dennis K.M. Ip, and Joseph T. Wu
Author affiliations: The University of Hong Kong School of Public Health, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, People’s Republic of China (E.H.Y. Lau, H. Nishiura, B.J. Cowling, D.K.M. Ip, J.T. Wu); and Japan Science and Technology Agency, Saitama, Japan (H. Nishiura)

Acknowledgments

We thank S.K. Chuang and Thomas Tsang of the Centre for Health Protection in Hong Kong for their kind support and assistance in collating the notification data. We thank Peng Wu for technical support.
This project was supported by the Harvard Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (grant no. U54 GM088558) and the Research Fund for the Control of Infectious Diseases, Food and Health Bureau, Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (grant no. HKU-11-04-02). H.N. received funding support from JST PRESTO program. B.J.C. received research funding from MedImmune Inc.. D.K.M.I. received research funding from F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd.

References

  1. Centre for Health Protection, Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. Number of notifications for notifiable infectious diseases, 2011 [cited 2012 Jan 11]. http://www.chp.gov.hk/en/notifiable1/10/26/43.htmlExternal Web Site Icon
  2. Centre for Health Protection, Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. Update on scarlet fever in Hong Kong [cited 2012 Jun 30]. http://www.chp.gov.hk/files/pdf/ltd_20110622_scarlet_fever_update.pdf Adobe PDF fileExternal Web Site Icon
  3. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Scarlet fever: a group A streptococcal infection. 2011 [cited 2011 Sep 1]. http://www.cdc.gov/Features/ScarletFever
  4. Shaikh N, Leonard E, Martin JM. Prevalence of streptococcal pharyngitis and streptococcal carriage in children: a meta-analysis. Pediatrics. 2010;126:e55764. DOIExternal Web Site IconPubMedExternal Web Site Icon
  5. Liang Y, Shen X, Huang G, Wang C, Shen Y, Yang Y. Characteristics of Streptococcus pyogenes strains isolated from Chinese children with scarlet fever. Acta Paediatr. 2008;97:16815. DOIExternal Web Site IconPubMedExternal Web Site Icon
  6. Lau MCK. Increase in scarlet fever cases in 2011. Communicable Diseases Watch. 2011; 8:48–9 [cited 2012 Jun 30]. http://www.chp.gov.hk/files/pdf/cdw_v8_12.pdf Adobe PDF fileExternal Web Site Icon
  7. Duncan CJ, Duncan SR, Scott S. The dynamics of scarlet fever epidemics in England and Wales in the 19th century. Epidemiol Infect. 1996;117:4939. DOIExternal Web Site IconPubMedExternal Web Site Icon
  8. Köhler W, Gerlach D, Knöll H. Streptococcal outbreaks and erythrogenic toxin type A. Zentralbl Bakteriol Mikrobiol Hyg [A]. 1987;266:10415 .DOIExternal Web Site IconPubMedExternal Web Site Icon
  9. Nishiura H, Chowell G. The effective reproduction number as a prelude to statistical estimation of time-dependent epidemic trends. In: Chowell G, Hayman JM, Bettencourt LMA, editors. Mathematical and statistical estimation approaches in epidemiology. New York: Springer; 2009. p. 103–21.

Figure

Technical Appendix

Suggested citation for this article: Lau EHY, Nishiura H, Cowling BJ, Ip DKM, Wu JT. Scarlet fever outbreak, Hong Kong, 2011 [letter]. Emerg Infect Dis [Internet]. 2012 Oct [date cited]. http://dx.doi.org/10.3201/eid1810.120062External Web Site Icon
DOI: 10.3201/eid1810.120062

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario