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Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Mycobacterium tuberculosis transmission in a newborn nursery and maternity ward--New York City, 2003

Evaluating young children recently exposed to airborne Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a public health priority. If infected, children aged <2 years are at high risk for severe tuberculosis (TB) disease (e.g., TB meningitis).

In December 2003, infectious pulmonary TB disease was diagnosed in a foreign-born nurse working in the newborn nursery and maternity ward of a New York City hospital (hospital A); the nurse had declined treatment for latent TB infection (LTBI) after testing positive 11 years earlier.

An investigation including medical evaluation of contacts in the nursery and maternity ward was conducted by the Bureau of TB Control (BTBC) at the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, hospital A, and CDC.

This report summarizes the results of that investigation, which determined that approximately 1,500 patients had been exposed to the nurse but the majority could not be located for evaluation. Among those who were tested, four infants had positive tuberculin skin test (TST) results, likely attributable to recent transmission of M. tuberculosis.

The findings emphasize the difficulty of conducting contact investigations in certain settings and the importance of effective LTBI testing and treatment programs for health-care workers (HCWs) to prevent TB disease and subsequent health-care--associated transmission.

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Colonization of neonates in a nursery ward with enteropathogenic Escherichia coli and correlation to the clinical histories of the children

D Senerwa, O Olsvik, L N Mutanda, J M Gathuma and K Wachsmuth
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Norwegian College of Veterinary Medicine, Oslo.

Stool samples were examined from 30 preterm neonates admitted to a nursery ward; 16 neonates had diarrhea, 12 constituted an age-matched control group without diarrhea, and 2 had an unknown history regarding diarrhea. Variable numbers of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli serotype O111:HNT strains possessing the gene coding for the enteroadherence factor (EAF) were found in stool samples from 13 of the neonates. No other microbiological enteropathogen was found.

A total of 294 strains (9 or 10 from each neonate, comprising 229 E. coli and 65 Klebsiella pneumoniae strains) were characterized with respect to plasmid content and grouped into 37 plasmid profile groups. Diarrhea was found not to be correlated with any specific plasmid profile or with the presence of the EAF-positive strains but rather with the number of strains with one specific plasmid profile or with the number of EAF-positive strains (of the 9 or 10 strains) isolated from each stool sample.

All the neonates who died had diarrhea (5 died of 16 with diarrhea); all five of the neonates who died possessed strains with one specific plasmid profile group, and EAF-positive strains were isolated from four of them. Of the seven neonates from whom seven or more EAF-positive isolates were isolated, three died, compared with only one of five of those from whom only a few (1 to 3 of 10) EAF-positive strains were isolated.

Both plasmid profiling and genetic probing with the EAF probe were found to be good alternatives when serotyping is not available for identification of O111:HNT enteropathogenic E. coli strains.

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