|
Influenza
A (H5N1) and SARS - Update: Interim Recommendations for Enhanced
U.S. Surveillance, Testing, and Infection Control
This
is an official CDC Health Advisory
Distributed
via Health Alert Network
February 3, 2004, 09:00
EST (09:00 AM EST)
CDCHAN-00185-04-02-03-ADV-N
Update
on Influenza A (H5N1) and SARS: Interim Recommendations for Enhanced
U.S. Surveillance, Testing, and Infection Control
Recent Developments
Influenza
A (H5N1) Virus Infections
Infections of
H5N1 among poultry have been confirmed in Cambodia, China, Hong
Kong SAR, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Laos, Thailand, and Vietnam (for
a continually updated listing of affected countries, visit the Web
site of the World Organization of Animal Health [OIE] at http://www.oie.int/eng/en_index.htm).
Human cases of influenza A (H5N1) infection have occurred in Vietnam
and Thailand. On February 1, 2004, the World Health Organization
(WHO) reported that laboratory test results had confirmed two new
cases of human H5N1 infection in Vietnam; both patients died. The
cases were in two sisters who are part of a cluster of four cases
of severe respiratory illness in a single family.
A detailed investigation of this cluster is under way;
limited human-to-human transmission
may be one possible explanation, but direct poultry-to-human transmission
cannot be ruled out, according to WHO.
To date, 10 laboratory-confirmed cases of H5N1 infection have been
reported in patients in Vietnam, 8 of whom died. In Thailand,
cases of H5N1 infection have been confirmed in 4 persons, 3 of whom
died. Laboratory results on additional possible cases are
pending. (For updated information, visit the WHO Web site at http://www.who.int/en/).
With the exception of the family cluster in Vietnam, it is believed
that all human H5N1 cases resulted from contact with infected birds
or surfaces contaminated with excretions from infected birds. At
this time, there is no evidence of efficient person-to-person transmission
in Vietnam or elsewhere.
Genetic sequencing of H5N1 viruses from human cases in Vietnam indicates
that all genes are of avian origin. (The acquisition of human influenza
viral genes increases the likelihood that a virus of avian origin
can be readily transmitted from person-to-person.)
Genetic sequencing of human H5N1 isolates from Vietnam additionally
showed characteristics commonly known to confer antiviral resistance
to amantadine and rimantadine, two antiviral drugs used for influenza.
The remaining two antivirals (oseltamivir and zanamavir) should
still be effective.
Severe
Acute Respiratory Syndrome
On
January 31, 2004, WHO announced that a new case of laboratory-confirmed
infection with SARS-associated coronavirus (SARS-CoV) had been reported
in China. This is the fourth SARS case (three confirmed, one
probable) reported in China since December 16, 2003.
The
most recent case occurred in a 40-year-old director of a hospital
and practicing physician in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China.
He became ill with SARS-like symptoms on January 7, 2004, and was
admitted to a hospital with pneumonia on January 16 and placed in
isolation.
Previously reported confirmed cases include a 20-year-old woman
who worked in a restaurant in Guangdong Province and became ill
on December 25, 2003, and a 32-year-old man in Guangdong Province
who had become ill on December 16, 2003.
A fourth person (probable case) –- a 35-year-old business man from
the Guangdong Province who had onset of illness on December 31,
2003 – tested positive for SARS-CoV infection at a national reference
laboratory in China and on preliminary serologic tests performed
by WHO SARS International Reference and Verification Network laboratories
in Hong Kong.
All four patients have recovered from their illness and have been
discharged from the hospital. To date, none of the contacts of these
cases has developed a SARS-like illness. The source of infection
in these individuals has not been determined.
Samples collected from cages that housed civets at the restaurant
where the waitress with confirmed SARS worked have tested positive
for traces of SARS-CoV, suggesting a possible source of infection.
However, evidence that civets transmit SARS-CoV to humans remains
inconclusive.
Interim
Recommendations: Enhanced U.S. Surveillance
and Diagnostic Evaluation
CDC
recommends enhanced surveillance efforts by state and local health
departments, hospitals, and clinicians to identify patients at increased
risk for influenza A (H5N1) and SARS. The clinical presentation
and travel history of persons with influenza A (H5N1) or SARS-CoV
infection may overlap. Interim recommendations for diagnostic
evaluation for these agents in individuals who meet certain epidemiologic
and clinical criteria follow below.
Influenza
A (H5N1) Virus Infections
Testing for
influenza A (H5N1) is indicated for
hospitalized patients
with:
a.
radiographically confirmed pneumonia, acute respiratory distress
syndrome (ARDS), or other severe respiratory illness for which an
alternate diagnosis has not been established,
AND
b.
history of travel within 10 days of symptom onset to a country with
documented H5N1 avian influenza in poultry and/or humans (for a
listing of H5N1-affected countries, see the OIE Web site at http://www.oie.int/eng/en_index.htm
and the WHO Web site at http://www.who.int/en/).
Testing for influenza
A (H5N1) should be considered on a case-by-case basis in consultation
with state and local health departments for
hospitalized or ambulatory
patients with:
a.
documented temperature of >38°C (>100.4°F),
AND
b.
one or more of the following: cough, sore throat, shortness of
breath,
AND
c.
history of contact with domestic poultry (e.g., visited a poultry
farm, household raising poultry, or bird market) or a known or suspected
human case of influenza A (H5N1) in an H5N1-affected country within
10 days of symptom onset.
Severe
Acute Respiratory Syndrome
CDC continues
to recommend consideration of testing for SARS-CoV in patients who
require hospitalization for radiographically confirmed pneumonia
or ARDS without identifiable etiology
AND who have one
of the following risk factors in the 10 days before the onset of
illness:
-
Travel to mainland
China, Hong Kong, or Taiwan, or close contact with an ill person
with a history of recent travel to one of these areas,
OR
-
Employment in an
occupation associated with a risk for SARS-CoV exposure (e.g.,
health care worker with direct patient contact; worker in a
laboratory that contains live SARS-CoV),
OR
-
Part of a cluster
of cases of atypical pneumonia without an alternative diagnosis.
For patients with pneumonia
or ARDS who have recently traveled to Guangdong Province, China,
diagnostic testing for SARS-CoV should be performed immediately.
For other patients, diagnostic testing for SARS should proceed for
such patients as described in guidelines at www.cdc.gov/ncidod/sars/absenceofsars.htm.
Interim
Recommendations: Infection Control Precautions
for Influenza A (H5N1)
All patients who
present to a health-care setting with fever and respiratory symptoms
should be managed according to recommendations for Respiratory
Hygiene and Cough Etiquette and questioned regarding their recent
travel history. Isolation precautions identical to those recommended
for SARS should be implemented for all hospitalized patients diagnosed
with or under evaluation for influenza A (H5N1) as follows:
-
Standard Precautions
-
Contact Precautions
-
Eye protection
-
Airborne Precautions
-
Place the patient
in an airborne isolation room (i.e., monitored negative
air pressure in relation to the surrounding areas with 6
to 12 air changes per hour).
-
Use a fit-tested
respirator, at least as protective as a NIOSH-approved N-95
filtering facepiece respirator, when entering the room.
For additional information
regarding these and other health-care isolation precautions, see
the Guidelines
for Isolation Precautions in Hospitals. These precautions
should be continued for 14 days after onset of symptoms until an
alternative diagnosis is established or until diagnostic test results
indicate that the patient is not infected with influenza A virus
(see Laboratory Testing Procedures below).
Patients managed as outpatients or hospitalized patients discharged
before 14 days should be isolated in the home setting on the basis
of principles outlined for the home isolation of SARS patients (see
http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/sars/guidance/i/pdf/i.pdf).
Laboratory
Testing Procedures
Highly pathogenic
avian influenza A (H5N1) is classified as a select agent and must
be worked with under Biosafety Level (BSL) 3+ laboratory conditions.
This includes controlled access double door entry with change room
and shower, use of respirators, decontamination of all wastes, and
showering out of all personnel.
Laboratories working on these viruses must be certified by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. The same BSL 3+ laboratory guidelines
are recommended for conducting virus isolation for SARS-CoV.
CDC does not
recommend that virus isolation studies on respiratory
specimens from patients who meet the above criteria be conducted
unless stringent BSL 3+ conditions can be met. Therefore, respiratory
virus cultures should not be performed in most clinical laboratories
and such cultures should not be ordered for patients suspected of
having H5N1 infection.
Clinical specimens from suspect A (H5N1) cases and SARS-CoV cases
may be tested by PCR assays using standard BSL 2 work practices
in a Class II biological safety cabinet. In addition, commercial
antigen detection testing can be conducted under BSL 2 levels to
test for influenza.
To assist public health public health laboratories with SARS and
respiratory illness diagnostic preparedness efforts, CDC has
developed real-time PCR protocols for a number of respiratory
pathogens, including influenza A and B viruses, adenovirus,
metapneumovirus, Legionella,
Chlamydia pneumoniae,
and Mycoplasma
pneumoniae.
Specimens
from persons meeting the
above clinical and epidemiologic criteria
should be sent to CDC if:
-
The specimen tests
positive for influenza A by PCR or by antigen detection testing,
OR
-
PCR assays for influenza
or SARS-CoV are not available at the state public health laboratory.
Because the sensitivity
of commercially available rapid diagnostic tests for influenza may
not always be optimal, CDC also will accept specimens from persons
meeting the above clinical criteria even if they test negative by
influenza rapid diagnostic testing if PCR assays are not available
at the state laboratory.
Requests for testing should come through the state and local health
departments, which should contact the CDC Director’s Emergency Operations
Center at 770-488-7100 before sending specimens for influenza A
(H5N1) or SARS testing.
More
Information
For further details
about the reported cases of influenza A (H5N1) in Asia, see the
WHO Web site http://www.who.int/en/.
Additional information about influenza is available on the CDC Web
site at www.cdc.gov/flu.
For more information about current U.S. SARS control guidelines,
see the CDC document, “In the Absence of SARS-CoV Transmission Worldwide:
Guidance for Surveillance, Clinical and Laboratory Evaluation, and
Reporting” at www.cdc.gov/ncidod/sars/absenceofsars.htm.
The document is part of CDC’s draft
Public Health Guidance for
Community-Level Preparedness and Response to Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome (SARS) www.cdc.gov/ncidod/sars/sarsprepplan.htm.
|