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Matthew Rollosson, RN, MPH&TM
   This presentation is a brief overview of travel-
    related infections
   I strongly encourage travelers to endemic
    countries to consult a travel medicine specialist
    at least one month prior to departure
   Find a travel medicine clinic:
       http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/page/find-clinic.htm
       http://www.astmh.org/source/ClinicalDirectory
       http://www.istm.org/WebForms/SearchClinics
   Hitchhiked in Africa,
                              1988-1989
                             Registered Nurse, 1992
                             Diploma in Clinical
                              Tropical Medicine &
                              Travelers’ Health, 2000
                             Worked in Ethiopia,
                              2002
                             Master of Public Health
                              & Tropical Medicine,
                              2009
Niger River, Mali, 1988
   Locally Acquired Dengue - Key West, Florida,
    2009—2010 (CDC, 2010)
   Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever - U.S.-Mexico
    Border, 2005 (CDC, 2007)
   Autochthonous Transmission of Trypanosoma
    cruzi, Louisiana (Dorn et al., 2007)
   Multifocal Autochthonous Transmission of
    Malaria - Florida, 2003 (CDC, 2004)
   Changing patterns of autochthonous malaria
    transmission in the United States (Zucker, 1996)
   West Nile Virus
   Eastern Equine Encephalitis
   Western Equine Encephalitis
   St. Louis Encephalitis
   La Crosse
   Chikungunya?
     Vector competence of Florida mosquitoes for
      chikungunya virus (Richards et al., 2010)
     Chikungunya: a potentially emerging epidemic?
      (Thiboutot et al., 2010)
   Primary Amebic Meningoencephalitis Deaths
    Associated With Sinus Irrigation Using Contaminated
    Tap Water (Yoder et al., 2012)
   The epidemiology of primary amoebic
    meningoencephalitis in the USA, 1962-2008 (Yoder et
    al., 2010)
   Raccoon Roundworms in Pet Kinkajous - Three States,
    1999 and 2010 (MMWR 2011)
   Raccoon Roundworm Encephalitis - Chicago, Illinois,
    and Los Angeles, California, 2000 (MMWR, 2002)
   Eosinophilic meningitis attributable to Angiostrongylus
    cantonensis infection in Hawaii (Hochberg et al. 2011)
   Parastrongylus (=Angiostrongylus) cantonensis now
    endemic in Louisiana wildlife (Kim et al., 2002)
   The finding of Angiostrongylus cantonensis in rats in
    New Orleans (Campbell & Little 1988)
               (Okay, they don’t really eat brains)
   Air travel                       Pre-existing conditions
       DVT                          Sexual health
   Envenomations/intoxications      Special needs
   Environment                      Trauma
     Altitude                           Crime
     Diving                             Motor vehicle accidents
     Heat/cold                          Natural disasters
     Pollution                          Violence
     Sunburn                        Recreational water exposure
   Food/water                         Leptospirosis
   Mental health                      Marine animals
       Culture shock                  Schistosomiasis
       Re-entry shock
       Substance abuse
   Death:
       Non-infectious
         Cardiovascular disease
         Drowning
         Motor vehicle accidents
       Infectious disease
         Malaria
   Most common non-fatal illness:
       Travelers’ diarrhea



                                     Steffen & Grieve, 2013
3000
          2820



2500




2000




1500




1000




 500                     428


                                         88
                                                      18             6               1
   0
       Falciparum   Typhoid fever   Leptospirosis   DHF/DSS     East African     Japanese
         malaria                                              trypanosomiasis   encephalitis


                                                                          Jensenius et al., 2013
   Protozoan parasite
   Complex lifecycle
   Transmitted by mosquitoes
   Four human species
       Plasmodium falciparum
         Widespread drug resistance
     P. vivax
     P. ovale
     P. malariae
     P. knowlesi
         Simian malaria               www.cdc.gov/malaria

   Vaccines in clinical trials
CDC 2012
1,691 cases reported to CDC
  Species                         Region of Acquisition
  P. falciparum      58%          Africa              65%
  P. vivax           19%                West Africa   73%

  P. malariae         2%          Asia                19%
  P. ovale            2%                South Asia    94%
  Unknown            18%                    India     81%
                                  Americas            15%


 Reason for travel
 Visiting friends and relatives (VFR)      71%
 Missionaries                              9%
 Business                                  8%               CDC 2012
   Atovaquone/proguanil (Malarone®)
       Daily
       1-2 days before arriving in malaria-endemic area
       7 days after leaving
   Doxycycline
       Daily
       1-2 day before arriving
       4 weeks after leaving
   Mefloquine
     Weekly
     2 weeks before arriving
     4 weeks after leaving
                                                           CDC, 2012
   35% of antimalarial drugs obtained in
    Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa failed
    chemical analysis (Nayyar et al. 2012)
   53% of artesunate tablets collected in Southeast
    Asia contained no trace of the drug (Dondorp
    et al., 2004)
   Subtherapeutic doses increase the risk of
    treatment failure and development of drug-
    resistance
   “Breakbone fever”
       Fever
       Rash
       Arthralgia
       Myalgia
       Headache
   Transmitted by mosquitoes
   Dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF)
   Dengue shock syndrome (DSS)
   Vaccines in clinical trials
CDC, 2012
Mosquitoes                          Chigger Mites
    Chikungunya                        Rickettsial pox
    Dengue                             Scrub typhus
    Japanese encephalitis
    Lymphatic filariasis           Deer flies (Chrysops)
    Malaria                              Loiasis
    Rift Valley fever
    Yellow fever                   Fleas
                                            Murine typhus
Ticks                                       Plague
       Babesiosis
       Ehrlichiosis/Anaplasmosis   Lice
       Relapsing fever                     Epidemic typhus
       Rickettsial pox                     Relapsing fever
       Tick typhus
       Tularemia                   Sandflies
                                         Leishmaniasis
Blackflies (Simulium)
     Onchocerciasis                Tsetse
                                            African trypanosomiasis
   Repellants
       Applied to skin:
           DEET
           Picaridin
           IR3535
           (Skin-So-Soft® Not-So-Good)
       Applied to clothing:
         Permethrin
   Bed nets
       Insecticide treated
   Clothing
       Cover
       Light-colored
                                          CDC, 2012; Fradlin, 2008
   4 – 6 weeks before travel
       Accelerated schedule
   Routine
       Age-specific
   Recommended
       Destination-specific
   Required
       Destination-specific
         Yellow fever
         Meningococcal (Hajj)
                                 Jong, 2008
   Inactivated polio vaccine (IPV)
       Single lifetime booster for adults traveling to areas
        with polio transmission and who have previously
        received primary series
   Influenza
       Year-round transmission in the tropics
   Measles, mumps, rubella (MMR)
       2 doses
   Tetanus, diphtheria, acellular pertussis (Tdap)
   Ongoing wild poliovirus transmission:
     Afghanistan
     Nigeria
     Pakistan
   Vaccine-associated paralytic poliomyelitis (VAPP)
       1 in 2.4 million OPV doses
   Vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV)
       Areas with inadequate polio vaccine coverage
       2012: Somalia, Chad, Kenya, DR Congo, Yemen
   Importation
     November 2012: outbreak in Niger imported from
      Nigeria
     December 2012: wild poliovirus from Pakistan found in
      sewage in Cairo, Egypt
                                                       WHO, 2013
   Imported vaccine-associate paralytic poliomyelitis –
    United States, 2005
   22 year old woman
         Religious exemption from IPV/OPV
         Stayed with a family in Costa Rica beginning Jan 14, 2005
           Infant in the family received OPV Jan 19
         Onset of symptoms March 2
       Sabin strain poliovirus isolated from stool
                                                                 CDC, 2006
   Transmission of imported vaccine-derived poliovirus
    in an undervaccinated community in Minnesota
     OPV not used in the U.S. since 2000
     In 2005, 8 Amish children found to be excreting poliovirus
     Source not identified
                                                      Alexander et al., 2009
   Measles declared eliminated from the U.S. in 2000
   222 cases in the U.S. in 2011
     200 associated with importation from other countries
     166 unvaccinated/unknown vaccination status
     141 eligible to receive MMR
     50 refused vaccination for personal, philosophical, or
      religious objections
   Measles in Europe
     39% of cases imported to the U.S. 2001-2008
     46% of cases imported to the U.S. in 2011

                                CDC, 2012; Parker Fiebelkorn et al., 2010
   Hepatitis A
   Hepatitis B
   Japanese encephalitis
   Meningococcal
   Pneumococcal
   Typhoid
   Varicella
   Yellow fever
   Hepatitis A
   Hepatitis B
   Meningococcal
   Pneumococcal
   Varicella
   Neisseria meningitidis
       Meningitis
       Meningococcemia
   Transmitted by respiratory droplets
       Risk factors: crowding, poverty, smoking
   African Meningitis Belt
       Major epidemics every 5-10 years
       Hot, dry, dusty season
       Ends with beginning of rainy season
       Asymptomatic nasopharyngeal carriage
   Vaccine
       Conjugate A, C, Y, W-135
       Required for Hajji
                                                   Apicella, 2010
CDC, 2012
   Salmonella enterica              Fever
       Subspecies Typhi               Remittent
         Drug resistance              Step-wise
       Non-typhoidal                  Sustained
        Salmonella                     Relative bradycardia
         S. paratyphi
                                     Constipation/diarrhea
         Clinically
         indistinguishable from      Abdominal pain
         typhoid
                                     Headache
   Fecal-oral                       Rose spots
    transmission
                                                  Thielman et al., 2010
Two vaccine licensed in the U.S.
 Vivotif®
       Live attenuated oral typhoid vaccine
       1 capsule every other day x 4 doses
       Do not take with antibiotics active against S. typhi
   Typhim Vi®
       Injectable Vi capsular polysaccharide vaccine
       1 IM dose
Do not prevent non-typhoidal Salmonella
  infections
   Flavi- “yellow”
   Dengue
   Japanese encephalitis
   St. Louis encephalitis
   Tickborne encephalitis
   West Nile virus
   Yellow fever
   Transmitted by mosquitoes
   Reservoir: forest primates
   Major epidemics in the U.S.
     Eastern seaboard, Mississippi Valley
     Last epidemic: New Orleans 1905
   Most infections self-limiting
       Fever, headache, myalgias
   Biphasic
       Period of remission
       Period of intoxication
         Fulminant hepatitis
         Mortality 20-50%
                                             Vaughn et al., 2010
   Relative bradycardia
       Fever without increase
        in heart rate
   Jean Charles Faget
       1818-1884
       New Orleans physician




                                 St Louis Cemetery No 2
                                 New Orleans, Louisiana
CDC, 2012
   International Certificate of Vaccination or
    Prophylaxis (ICVP)
   Vaccine must be administered by a provider
    with an official uniform stamp
wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/yellow-fever-vaccination-clinics/search.htm




                                                            CDC, 2012
   Transmitted by mosquitoes
       Night-biting
       Most active June - November
       Not active during winter months
   Most infections asymptomatic
   Encephalitis:
       Fever, headache, lethargy
       Movement disorders
       Agitation, decreased LOC, coma
       Meningeal signs, seizures, focal neurological deficits
       20-30% case fatality
       30-50% left with residual neurological deficits
                                                      CDC, 2010
CDC, 2012
   Most travelers not at risk
   Low risk in urban areas
   Long stays in or frequent visits to
    rural/farming areas
       Vero cell culture vaccine: ≥17 years of age
         2 doses 28 days apart
         Second dose at least 1 week before travel
         Not licensed for children in the U.S.
       Mouse brain vaccine 1 – 16 years of age
         3 doses at 0, 7, and 30 days
         No longer available in the U.S.
                                                      CDC, 2010
   American Society of Tropical Medicine and
    Hygiene
       www.astmh.org
   International Society of Travel Medicine
       www.istm.org
   WHO travel and health
       www.who.int/topics/travel/en
   Alexander, J. P., Ehresmann, K., Seward, J., Wax, G., Harriman, K., Fuller, S. et al. (2009).
    Transmission of imported vaccine-derived poliovirus in an undervaccinated community
    in Minnesota. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 199(3), 391-397.
    http://jid.oxfordjournals.org/content/199/3/391.full.
   Apicella, M. A. (2010). Neisseria meningitidis. In G. L. Mandell, J. E. Bennett, & R. Dolin
    (Eds.) Mandell, Douglas, and Bennett's principles and practice of infectious diseases, (7th Ed.).
    Elsevier [Electronic version].
   Campbell, B. G. & Little, M. D. (1988). The finding of Angiostrongylus cantonensis in
    rats in New Orleans. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 38(3), 568-573.
   Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (1994). Typhoid immunization
    recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP).
    Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 43(14), 1-7.
    http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/00035643.htm.
   Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2002). Raccoon roundworm encephalitis –
    Chicago, Illinois, and Los Angeles, California, 2000. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly
    Report, 50(51), 1153-1155.
    http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5051a1.htm.
   Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2004). Multifocal autochthonous
    transmission of malaria – Florida, 2003. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 53(19), 412-
    413. http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5319a2.htm.
   Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2006). Imported vaccine-associated
    paralytic poliomyelitis – United States, 2005. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 55(4),
    97-99. http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5504a2.htm.
   Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2007). Dengue hemorrhagic fever – U.S-
    Mexico border, 2005. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 56(31), 785-789.
    http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5631a1.htm.
   Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2010). Japanese encephalitis vaccines.
    Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP).
    Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 59(1), 1-27.
    http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/rr5901a1.htm.
   Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2010). Locally acquired dengue – Key West,
    Florida, 2009-2010. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 59(19), 577-581.
    http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5919a1.htm.
   Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2011). Raccoon roundworms in pet
    kinkajous – three states, 1999 and 2010. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 60(10), 302-
    305. http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6010a2.htm.
   Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2012). CDC health information for
    international travel 2012. New York: Oxford University Press. [Electronic version].
    http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/page/yellowbook-2012-home.htm.
   Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2012). Malaria surveillance – United States,
    2010. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 61(Suppl. 2), 1-17.
    http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/ss6102a1.htm.
   Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2012). Measles – United States, 2011.
    Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 61(15), 253-257.
    http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6115a1.htm.
   Dondorp, A. M., Newton, P. N., Mayxay, M., Van Damme, W., Smithuis, F. M., Yeung, S.
    et al. (2004). Fake antimalarials in Southeast Asia are a major impediment malaria
    control: multinational cross-sectional survey on the prevalence of fake antimalarials.
    Tropical Medicine and International Health, 9(12), 1241-1246.
   Dorn, P. L., Perniciaro, L., Yabsley, M. J., Roellig, D. M., Diaz, J., & Wesson, D. (2007).
    Autochthonous transmission of Trypanosoma cruzi, Louisiana. Emerging Infectious
    Diseases, 13(4), 605-607. http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/13/4/06-1002_article.htm.
   Fradin, M. S. (2008). Insect protection. In E. C. Jong & C. Sanford (Eds.) Travel and tropical
    medicine manual. (4th Ed.). Elsevier. [Electronic version].
   Hochberg, N. S., Blackburn, B. G., Park, S. Y., Sejvar, J. J., Effler, P. V., Herwaldt, B.
    L.(2011). Eosinophilic meningitis attributable to Angiostrongylus cantonensis infection
    in Hawaii. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 85(4), 685-690.
    http://www.ajtmh.org/content/85/4/685.long.
   Jensenius, M., Han. P. V., Schlagenhauf, P., Schwartz, E., Parola, P., Castelli, F. et al.
    (2013). Acute and potentially life-threatening tropical diseases in western travelers – a
    GeoSentinal multicenter study, 1996-2011. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and
    Hygiene, 88(2), 397-404.
   Jong, E. C. (2008). Immunizations for travelers. In E. C. Jong & C. Sanford (Eds.) Travel
    and tropical medicine manual. (4th Ed.). Elsevier. [Electronic version].
   Kim, D. Y., Stewart, T. B., Bauer, R. W., & Mitchell, M. (2002) Parastrongylus
    (=Angiostrongylus) cantonensis now endemic in Louisiana wildlife. Journal of
    Parasitology, 88(5), 1024-1026.
   Nayyar, G. M. L., Breman, J. G., Newton, P. N., & Herrington, J. (2012). Poor-quality
    antimalarial drugs in Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. Lancet Infectious Diseases,
    12(6), 488-496.
   Parker Fiebelkorn, A., Redd, S. B., Gallagher, K., Rota, P. A., Rota, J., Bellini, W. et al.
    (2010). Measles in the United States during the postelimination era. Journal of Infectious
    Diseases, 202(10), 1520-1528. http://jid.oxfordjournals.org/content/202/10/1520.long.
   Richards, S. L., Anderson, S. L., & Smartt, C. T. (2010). Vector competence of Florida
    mosquitoes for chikungunya virus. Journal of Vector Ecology, 35(2), 439-443.
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3076135.
   Steffen, R. & Grieve, S. (2013). Epidemiology: morbidity and mortality in travelers. In J.
    S. Keystone, D. O. Freedman, P. E. Kozarsky, B. A. Connor, & H. D. Nothdurft (Eds.)
    Travel medicine (3rd Ed.) Elsevier [Electronic version].
   Thiboutot, M. M., Kannan, S., Kawalekar, O. U., Shedlock, D. J., Khan, A. S., Sarangan, G.
    et al. (2010). Chikungunya: a potentially emerging epidemic? PLoS Neglected Tropical
    Diseases, 4(4), e623.
    http://www.plosntds.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pntd.0000623.
   Thielman, N. M., Crump, J. A., & Guerrant, R. L. (2010). Enteric fever and other causes of
    abdominal symptoms with fever. In G. L. Mandell, J. E. Bennett, & R. Dolin (Eds.)
    Mandell, Douglas, and Bennett's principles and practice of infectious diseases, (7th Ed.).
    Elsevier [Electronic version].
   Vaughn, D. W., Barrett, A., Solomon, T. (2010). Flaviviruses (yellow fever, dengue,
    dengue hemorrhagic fever, Japanese encephalitis, West Nile encephalitis, St. Louis
    endephalitis, tick-borne encephalitis). In G. L. Mandell, J. E. Bennett, & R. Dolin
    (Eds.) Mandell, Douglas, and Bennett's principles and practice of infectious diseases, (7th
    Ed.). Elsevier [Electronic version].
   World Health Organization. (2013). Weekly epidemiological record, 7(88).
    http://www.who.int/wer/2013/wer8807.pdf.
   Yoder, J. S., Eddy, B. A., Visvesvara, G. S., Capewell, L., Beach, M. J. (2010). The
    epidemiology of primary amoebic meningoencephalitis in the USA, 1962-2008.
    Epidemiology and Infection, 138(7), 968-975.

   Yoder, J. S., Straif-Bourgeois, S., Roy, S. L., Moore, T. A., Visvesvara, G. S., Ratard, R. C..
    et al. (2012). Primary amebic meningoencephalitis deaths associated with sinus irrigation
    using contaminated tap water. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 55(9), e79-85.

   Zucker, J. R. (1996). Changing patterns of autochthonous malaria transmission in the
    United States: a review of recent outbreaks. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 2(1), 37-43.
    http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/2/1/96-0104_article.htm.
Congo River, 1989

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Travel Medicine Overview

  • 2. This presentation is a brief overview of travel- related infections  I strongly encourage travelers to endemic countries to consult a travel medicine specialist at least one month prior to departure  Find a travel medicine clinic:  http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/page/find-clinic.htm  http://www.astmh.org/source/ClinicalDirectory  http://www.istm.org/WebForms/SearchClinics
  • 3. Hitchhiked in Africa, 1988-1989  Registered Nurse, 1992  Diploma in Clinical Tropical Medicine & Travelers’ Health, 2000  Worked in Ethiopia, 2002  Master of Public Health & Tropical Medicine, 2009 Niger River, Mali, 1988
  • 4. Locally Acquired Dengue - Key West, Florida, 2009—2010 (CDC, 2010)  Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever - U.S.-Mexico Border, 2005 (CDC, 2007)  Autochthonous Transmission of Trypanosoma cruzi, Louisiana (Dorn et al., 2007)  Multifocal Autochthonous Transmission of Malaria - Florida, 2003 (CDC, 2004)  Changing patterns of autochthonous malaria transmission in the United States (Zucker, 1996)
  • 5. West Nile Virus  Eastern Equine Encephalitis  Western Equine Encephalitis  St. Louis Encephalitis  La Crosse  Chikungunya?  Vector competence of Florida mosquitoes for chikungunya virus (Richards et al., 2010)  Chikungunya: a potentially emerging epidemic? (Thiboutot et al., 2010)
  • 6. Primary Amebic Meningoencephalitis Deaths Associated With Sinus Irrigation Using Contaminated Tap Water (Yoder et al., 2012)  The epidemiology of primary amoebic meningoencephalitis in the USA, 1962-2008 (Yoder et al., 2010)  Raccoon Roundworms in Pet Kinkajous - Three States, 1999 and 2010 (MMWR 2011)  Raccoon Roundworm Encephalitis - Chicago, Illinois, and Los Angeles, California, 2000 (MMWR, 2002)  Eosinophilic meningitis attributable to Angiostrongylus cantonensis infection in Hawaii (Hochberg et al. 2011)  Parastrongylus (=Angiostrongylus) cantonensis now endemic in Louisiana wildlife (Kim et al., 2002)  The finding of Angiostrongylus cantonensis in rats in New Orleans (Campbell & Little 1988) (Okay, they don’t really eat brains)
  • 7. Air travel  Pre-existing conditions  DVT  Sexual health  Envenomations/intoxications  Special needs  Environment  Trauma  Altitude  Crime  Diving  Motor vehicle accidents  Heat/cold  Natural disasters  Pollution  Violence  Sunburn  Recreational water exposure  Food/water  Leptospirosis  Mental health  Marine animals  Culture shock  Schistosomiasis  Re-entry shock  Substance abuse
  • 8. Death:  Non-infectious  Cardiovascular disease  Drowning  Motor vehicle accidents  Infectious disease  Malaria  Most common non-fatal illness:  Travelers’ diarrhea Steffen & Grieve, 2013
  • 9. 3000 2820 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 428 88 18 6 1 0 Falciparum Typhoid fever Leptospirosis DHF/DSS East African Japanese malaria trypanosomiasis encephalitis Jensenius et al., 2013
  • 10. Protozoan parasite  Complex lifecycle  Transmitted by mosquitoes  Four human species  Plasmodium falciparum  Widespread drug resistance  P. vivax  P. ovale  P. malariae  P. knowlesi  Simian malaria www.cdc.gov/malaria  Vaccines in clinical trials
  • 12. 1,691 cases reported to CDC Species Region of Acquisition P. falciparum 58% Africa 65% P. vivax 19% West Africa 73% P. malariae 2% Asia 19% P. ovale 2% South Asia 94% Unknown 18% India 81% Americas 15% Reason for travel Visiting friends and relatives (VFR) 71% Missionaries 9% Business 8% CDC 2012
  • 13. Atovaquone/proguanil (Malarone®)  Daily  1-2 days before arriving in malaria-endemic area  7 days after leaving  Doxycycline  Daily  1-2 day before arriving  4 weeks after leaving  Mefloquine  Weekly  2 weeks before arriving  4 weeks after leaving CDC, 2012
  • 14. 35% of antimalarial drugs obtained in Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa failed chemical analysis (Nayyar et al. 2012)  53% of artesunate tablets collected in Southeast Asia contained no trace of the drug (Dondorp et al., 2004)  Subtherapeutic doses increase the risk of treatment failure and development of drug- resistance
  • 15. “Breakbone fever”  Fever  Rash  Arthralgia  Myalgia  Headache  Transmitted by mosquitoes  Dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF)  Dengue shock syndrome (DSS)  Vaccines in clinical trials
  • 17. Mosquitoes Chigger Mites  Chikungunya  Rickettsial pox  Dengue  Scrub typhus  Japanese encephalitis  Lymphatic filariasis Deer flies (Chrysops)  Malaria  Loiasis  Rift Valley fever  Yellow fever Fleas  Murine typhus Ticks  Plague  Babesiosis  Ehrlichiosis/Anaplasmosis Lice  Relapsing fever  Epidemic typhus  Rickettsial pox  Relapsing fever  Tick typhus  Tularemia Sandflies  Leishmaniasis Blackflies (Simulium)  Onchocerciasis Tsetse  African trypanosomiasis
  • 18. Repellants  Applied to skin:  DEET  Picaridin  IR3535  (Skin-So-Soft® Not-So-Good)  Applied to clothing:  Permethrin  Bed nets  Insecticide treated  Clothing  Cover  Light-colored CDC, 2012; Fradlin, 2008
  • 19. 4 – 6 weeks before travel  Accelerated schedule  Routine  Age-specific  Recommended  Destination-specific  Required  Destination-specific  Yellow fever  Meningococcal (Hajj) Jong, 2008
  • 20. Inactivated polio vaccine (IPV)  Single lifetime booster for adults traveling to areas with polio transmission and who have previously received primary series  Influenza  Year-round transmission in the tropics  Measles, mumps, rubella (MMR)  2 doses  Tetanus, diphtheria, acellular pertussis (Tdap)
  • 21. Ongoing wild poliovirus transmission:  Afghanistan  Nigeria  Pakistan  Vaccine-associated paralytic poliomyelitis (VAPP)  1 in 2.4 million OPV doses  Vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV)  Areas with inadequate polio vaccine coverage  2012: Somalia, Chad, Kenya, DR Congo, Yemen  Importation  November 2012: outbreak in Niger imported from Nigeria  December 2012: wild poliovirus from Pakistan found in sewage in Cairo, Egypt WHO, 2013
  • 22. Imported vaccine-associate paralytic poliomyelitis – United States, 2005  22 year old woman  Religious exemption from IPV/OPV  Stayed with a family in Costa Rica beginning Jan 14, 2005  Infant in the family received OPV Jan 19  Onset of symptoms March 2  Sabin strain poliovirus isolated from stool CDC, 2006  Transmission of imported vaccine-derived poliovirus in an undervaccinated community in Minnesota  OPV not used in the U.S. since 2000  In 2005, 8 Amish children found to be excreting poliovirus  Source not identified Alexander et al., 2009
  • 23. Measles declared eliminated from the U.S. in 2000  222 cases in the U.S. in 2011  200 associated with importation from other countries  166 unvaccinated/unknown vaccination status  141 eligible to receive MMR  50 refused vaccination for personal, philosophical, or religious objections  Measles in Europe  39% of cases imported to the U.S. 2001-2008  46% of cases imported to the U.S. in 2011 CDC, 2012; Parker Fiebelkorn et al., 2010
  • 24. Hepatitis A  Hepatitis B  Japanese encephalitis  Meningococcal  Pneumococcal  Typhoid  Varicella  Yellow fever
  • 25. Hepatitis A  Hepatitis B  Meningococcal  Pneumococcal  Varicella
  • 26. Neisseria meningitidis  Meningitis  Meningococcemia  Transmitted by respiratory droplets  Risk factors: crowding, poverty, smoking  African Meningitis Belt  Major epidemics every 5-10 years  Hot, dry, dusty season  Ends with beginning of rainy season  Asymptomatic nasopharyngeal carriage  Vaccine  Conjugate A, C, Y, W-135  Required for Hajji Apicella, 2010
  • 28. Salmonella enterica  Fever  Subspecies Typhi  Remittent  Drug resistance  Step-wise  Non-typhoidal  Sustained Salmonella  Relative bradycardia  S. paratyphi  Constipation/diarrhea  Clinically indistinguishable from  Abdominal pain typhoid  Headache  Fecal-oral  Rose spots transmission Thielman et al., 2010
  • 29. Two vaccine licensed in the U.S.  Vivotif®  Live attenuated oral typhoid vaccine  1 capsule every other day x 4 doses  Do not take with antibiotics active against S. typhi  Typhim Vi®  Injectable Vi capsular polysaccharide vaccine  1 IM dose Do not prevent non-typhoidal Salmonella infections
  • 30. Flavi- “yellow”  Dengue  Japanese encephalitis  St. Louis encephalitis  Tickborne encephalitis  West Nile virus  Yellow fever
  • 31. Transmitted by mosquitoes  Reservoir: forest primates  Major epidemics in the U.S.  Eastern seaboard, Mississippi Valley  Last epidemic: New Orleans 1905  Most infections self-limiting  Fever, headache, myalgias  Biphasic  Period of remission  Period of intoxication  Fulminant hepatitis  Mortality 20-50% Vaughn et al., 2010
  • 32. Relative bradycardia  Fever without increase in heart rate  Jean Charles Faget  1818-1884  New Orleans physician St Louis Cemetery No 2 New Orleans, Louisiana
  • 34. International Certificate of Vaccination or Prophylaxis (ICVP)  Vaccine must be administered by a provider with an official uniform stamp wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/yellow-fever-vaccination-clinics/search.htm CDC, 2012
  • 35. Transmitted by mosquitoes  Night-biting  Most active June - November  Not active during winter months  Most infections asymptomatic  Encephalitis:  Fever, headache, lethargy  Movement disorders  Agitation, decreased LOC, coma  Meningeal signs, seizures, focal neurological deficits  20-30% case fatality  30-50% left with residual neurological deficits CDC, 2010
  • 37. Most travelers not at risk  Low risk in urban areas  Long stays in or frequent visits to rural/farming areas  Vero cell culture vaccine: ≥17 years of age  2 doses 28 days apart  Second dose at least 1 week before travel  Not licensed for children in the U.S.  Mouse brain vaccine 1 – 16 years of age  3 doses at 0, 7, and 30 days  No longer available in the U.S. CDC, 2010
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