Contact investigation after a fatal case of extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) in an aircraft, Germany, July 2013

Author:

an der Heiden Maria1,Hauer Barbara1,Fiebig Lena1,Glaser-Paschke Gisela2,Stemmler Markus3,Simon Claudia4,Rüsch-Gerdes Sabine5,Gilsdorf Andreas1,Haas Walter1

Affiliation:

1. Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany

2. Zentrum für tuberkulosekranke und -gefährdete Menschen, Gesundheitsamt Lichtenberg, Berlin, Germany

3. Gesundheitsamt Reinickendorf, Berlin, Germany

4. Landesamt für Gesundheit und Soziales, Berlin, Germany

5. National Reference Centre for Mycobacteria, Borstel, Germany

Abstract

In July 2013, a passenger died of infectious extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) on board of an aircraft after a 3-hour flight from Turkey to Germany. Initial information indicated the patient had moved about the aircraft coughing blood. We thus aimed to contact and inform all persons exposed within the aircraft and to test them for newly acquired TB infection. Two-stage testing within 8 weeks from exposure and at least 8 weeks after exposure was suggested, using either interferon gamma release assays (IGRAs) or tuberculin skin test (TST). The TST cut-off was defined at a diameter > 10 mm; for differentiation between conversion and boosting, conversion was defined as increase of skin induration > 5 mm. Overall, 155 passengers and seven crew members were included in the investigation: the questionnaire response rate was 83%; 112 (69%) persons were tested at least once for TB infection. In one passenger, who sat next to the area where the patient died, a test conversion was registered. As of March 2017, no secondary active TB cases have been reported. We describe an unusual situation in which we applied contact tracing beyond existing European guidelines; we found one latent tuberculosis infection in a passenger, which we consider probably newly acquired.

Publisher

European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (ECDC)

Subject

Virology,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Epidemiology

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