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Laboratory Diagnosis of Lassa Fever
Raabe, Vanessa; Koehler, Jeffrey
Lassa virus remains an important cause of illness in West Africa and among the travelers returning from this region with an acute febrile illness. The symptoms of Lassa fever can be nonspecific and mimic those of other endemic infections, especially early in illness, making a clinical diagnosis difficult; therefore, laboratory testing is needed to confirm the diagnosis. An early identification of Lassa fever is crucial for maximizing the benefit of available antiviral therapy, as treatment efficacy rapidly decreases following the clinical onset of the disease. This minireview provides an overview of the currently available diagnostic tests for Lassa fever and their strengths and weaknesses.
PMCID:5442519
PMID: 28404674
ISSN: 1098-660x
CID: 4007982
Bacterial and viral co-infections complicating severe influenza: Incidence and impact among 507 U.S. patients, 2013-14
Shah, Nirav S; Greenberg, Jared A; McNulty, Moira C; Gregg, Kevin S; Riddell, James; Mangino, Julie E; Weber, Devin M; Hebert, Courtney L; Marzec, Natalie S; Barron, Michelle A; Chaparro-Rojas, Fredy; Restrepo, Alejandro; Hemmige, Vagish; Prasidthrathsint, Kunatum; Cobb, Sandra; Herwaldt, Loreen; Raabe, Vanessa; Cannavino, Christopher R; Hines, Andrea Green; Bares, Sara H; Antiporta, Philip B; Scardina, Tonya; Patel, Ursula; Reid, Gail; Mohazabnia, Parvin; Kachhdiya, Suresh; Le, Binh-Minh; Park, Connie J; Ostrowsky, Belinda; Robicsek, Ari; Smith, Becky A; Schied, Jeanmarie; Bhatti, Micah M; Mayer, Stockton; Sikka, Monica; Murphy-Aguilu, Ivette; Patwari, Priti; Abeles, Shira R; Torriani, Francesca J; Abbas, Zainab; Toya, Sophie; Doktor, Katherine; Chakrabarti, Anindita; Doblecki-Lewis, Susanne; Looney, David J; David, Michael Z
BACKGROUND:Influenza acts synergistically with bacterial co-pathogens. Few studies have described co-infection in a large cohort with severe influenza infection. OBJECTIVES:To describe the spectrum and clinical impact of co-infections. STUDY DESIGN:Retrospective cohort study of patients with severe influenza infection from September 2013 through April 2014 in intensive care units at 33 U.S. hospitals comparing characteristics of cases with and without co-infection in bivariable and multivariable analysis. RESULTS:Of 507 adult and pediatric patients, 114 (22.5%) developed bacterial co-infection and 23 (4.5%) developed viral co-infection. Staphylococcus aureus was the most common cause of co-infection, isolated in 47 (9.3%) patients. Characteristics independently associated with the development of bacterial co-infection of adult patients in a logistic regression model included the absence of cardiovascular disease (OR 0.41 [0.23-0.73], p=0.003), leukocytosis (>11K/μl, OR 3.7 [2.2-6.2], p<0.001; reference: normal WBC 3.5-11K/μl) at ICU admission and a higher ICU admission SOFA score (for each increase by 1 in SOFA score, OR 1.1 [1.0-1.2], p=0.001). Bacterial co-infections (OR 2.2 [1.4-3.6], p=0.001) and viral co-infections (OR 3.1 [1.3-7.4], p=0.010) were both associated with death in bivariable analysis. Patients with a bacterial co-infection had a longer hospital stay, a longer ICU stay and were likely to have had a greater delay in the initiation of antiviral administration than patients without co-infection (p<0.05) in bivariable analysis. CONCLUSIONS:Bacterial co-infections were common, resulted in delay of antiviral therapy and were associated with increased resource allocation and higher mortality.
PMID: 27130980
ISSN: 1873-5967
CID: 4007972
Severe Influenza in 33 US Hospitals, 2013-2014: Complications and Risk Factors for Death in 507 Patients
Shah, Nirav S; Greenberg, Jared A; McNulty, Moira C; Gregg, Kevin S; Riddell, James; Mangino, Julie E; Weber, Devin M; Hebert, Courtney L; Marzec, Natalie S; Barron, Michelle A; Chaparro-Rojas, Fredy; Restrepo, Alejandro; Hemmige, Vagish; Prasidthrathsint, Kunatum; Cobb, Sandra; Herwaldt, Loreen; Raabe, Vanessa; Cannavino, Christopher R; Hines, Andrea Green; Bares, Sara H; Antiporta, Philip B; Scardina, Tonya; Patel, Ursula; Reid, Gail; Mohazabnia, Parvin; Kachhdiya, Suresh; Le, Binh-Minh; Park, Connie J; Ostrowsky, Belinda; Robicsek, Ari; Smith, Becky A; Schied, Jeanmarie; Bhatti, Micah M; Mayer, Stockton; Sikka, Monica; Murphy-Aguilu, Ivette; Patwari, Priti; Abeles, Shira R; Torriani, Francesca J; Abbas, Zainab; Toya, Sophie; Doktor, Katherine; Chakrabarti, Anindita; Doblecki-Lewis, Susanne; Looney, David J; David, Michael Z
BACKGROUND:Influenza A (H1N1) pdm09 became the predominant circulating strain in the United States during the 2013-2014 influenza season. Little is known about the epidemiology of severe influenza during this season. METHODS:A retrospective cohort study of severely ill patients with influenza infection in intensive care units in 33 US hospitals from September 1, 2013, through April 1, 2014, was conducted to determine risk factors for mortality present on intensive care unit admission and to describe patient characteristics, spectrum of disease, management, and outcomes. RESULTS:A total of 444 adults and 63 children were admitted to an intensive care unit in a study hospital; 93 adults (20.9%) and 4 children (6.3%) died. By logistic regression analysis, the following factors were significantly associated with mortality among adult patients: older age (>65 years, odds ratio, 3.1 [95% CI, 1.4-6.9], P=.006 and 50-64 years, 2.5 [1.3-4.9], P=.007; reference age 18-49 years), male sex (1.9 [1.1-3.3], P=.031), history of malignant tumor with chemotherapy administered within the prior 6 months (12.1 [3.9-37.0], P<.001), and a higher Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score (for each increase by 1 in score, 1.3 [1.2-1.4], P<.001). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Risk factors for death among US patients with severe influenza during the 2013-2014 season, when influenza A (H1N1) pdm09 was the predominant circulating strain type, shifted in the first postpandemic season in which it predominated toward those of a more typical epidemic influenza season.
PMID: 26224364
ISSN: 1559-6834
CID: 4007962
Hepatitis a screening for internationally adopted children from hepatitis A endemic countries [Case Report]
Raabe, Vanessa N; Sautter, Casey; Chesney, Mary; Eckerle, Judith K; Howard, Cynthia R; John, Chandy C
Screening for hepatitis A virus (HAV) infection is not currently routinely recommended in internationally adopted children. International adoptees seen at the University of Minnesota International Adoption Clinic from 2006 to 2010 were assessed for acute HAV infection (positive HAV immunoglobulin M). Thirty of the 656 children screened (4.6%) were acutely HAV infected. HAV-infected children emigrated from Ethiopia (16), Guatemala (4), China (2), Colombia (2), Haiti (2), Philippines (2), Liberia (1), and Nepal (1). Infection was most frequent among children younger than 2 years (6.7%). No symptoms distinguished children with acute HAV infection from uninfected children. HAV infection caused significant social disruption, including separation of children from their ill adoptive parents during the initial weeks postarrival, a period important for postadoption adjustment and attachment. All international adoptees arriving from countries with high or intermediate HAV endemicity should be screened for HAV infection on arrival to the United States.
PMID: 24137028
ISSN: 1938-2707
CID: 4007952
Infection control during filoviral hemorrhagic Fever outbreaks
Raabea, Vanessa N; Borcherta, Matthias
Breaking the human-to-human transmission cycle remains the cornerstone of infection control during filoviral (Ebola and Marburg) hemorrhagic fever outbreaks. This requires effective identification and isolation of cases, timely contact tracing and monitoring, proper usage of barrier personal protection gear by health workers, and safely conducted burials. Solely implementing these measures is insufficient for infection control; control efforts must be culturally sensitive and conducted in a transparent manner to promote the necessary trust between the community and infection control team in order to succeed. This article provides a review of the literature on infection control during filoviral hemorrhagic fever outbreaks focusing on outbreaks in a developing setting and lessons learned from previous outbreaks. The primary search database used to review the literature was PUBMED, the National Library of Medicine website.
PMCID:3326963
PMID: 22529631
ISSN: 0974-8245
CID: 4008042
Lassa hemorrhagic fever in a late term pregnancy from northern Sierra Leone with a positive maternal outcome: case report [Case Report]
Branco, Luis M; Boisen, Matt L; Andersen, Kristian G; Grove, Jessica N; Moses, Lina M; Muncy, Ivana J; Henderson, Lee A; Schieffellin, John S; Robinson, James E; Bangura, James J; Grant, Donald S; Raabe, Vanessa N; Fonnie, Mbalu; Zaitsev, Eleina M; Sabeti, Pardis C; Garry, Robert F
Lassa fever (LF) is a devastating viral disease prevalent in West Africa. Efforts to take on this public health crisis have been hindered by lack of infrastructure and rapid field deployable diagnosis in areas where the disease is prevalent. Recent capacity building at the Kenema Government Hospital Lassa Fever Ward (KGH LFW) in Sierra Leone has lead to a major turning point in the diagnosis, treatment and study of LF. Herein we present the first comprehensive rapid diagnosis and real time characterization of an acute hemorrhagic LF case at KGH LFW. This case report focuses on a third trimester pregnant Sierra Leonean woman from the historically non-endemic Northern district of Tonkolili who survived the illness despite fetal demise. Employed in this study were newly developed recombinant LASV Antigen Rapid Test cassettes and dipstick lateral flow immunoassays (LFI) that enabled the diagnosis of LF within twenty minutes of sample collection. Deregulation of overall homeostasis, significant hepatic and renal system involvement, and immunity profiles were extensively characterized during the course of hospitalization. Rapid diagnosis, prompt treatment with a full course of intravenous (IV) ribavirin, IV fluids management, and real time monitoring of clinical parameters resulted in a positive maternal outcome despite admission to the LFW seven days post onset of symptoms, fetal demise, and a natural still birth delivery. These studies solidify the growing rapid diagnostic, treatment, and surveillance capabilities at the KGH LF Laboratory, and the potential to significantly improve the current high mortality rate caused by LF. As a result of the growing capacity, we were also able to isolate Lassa virus (LASV) RNA from the patient and perform Sanger sequencing where we found significant genetic divergence from commonly circulating Sierra Leonean strains, showing potential for the discovery of a newly emerged LASV strain with expanded geographic distribution. Furthermore, recent emergence of LF cases in Northern Sierra Leone highlights the need for superior diagnostics to aid in the monitoring of LASV strain divergence with potentially increased geographic expansion.
PMID: 21843352
ISSN: 1743-422x
CID: 4007942
Infection control during filoviral hemorrhagic fever outbreaks: preferences of community members and health workers in Masindi, Uganda
Raabe, Vanessa N; Mutyaba, Imaam; Roddy, Paul; Lutwama, Julius J; Geissler, Wenzel; Borchert, Matthias
Interviews were conducted with health workers and community members in Masindi, Uganda on improving the acceptability of infection control measures used during an Ebola outbreak. Measures that promote cultural sensitivity and transparency of control activities were preferred and should be employed in future control efforts. We suggest assessing the practicality of body bags with viewing windows, and face shields with or without chin protectors, in future outbreaks.
PMID: 19783269
ISSN: 1878-3503
CID: 4007932