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Abstract
Jernigan DB, Hofmann J, Cetron MS, Genese CA, Nuorti JP, Fields BS,
Benson RF, Carter RJ, Edelstein PH, Guerrero IC, Paul SM, Lipman HB,
Breiman R. "Outbreak of Legionnaires' disease among cruise ship
passengers exposed to a contaminated whirlpool spa," Lancet, 1996, 347:9000 (Feb 24),
494-9
Outbreaks of travel-related
Legionnaires' disease present a
public-health challenge since rapid, sensitive, and specific diagnostic
tests are not widely used and because detection of clusters of disease
among travellers is difficult. We report an outbreak of Legionnaires'
disease among cruise ship passengers that occurred in April, 1994, but
that went unrecognised until July, 1994. After rapid diagnosis of
Legionnaires' disease in three passengers by urine antigen testing, we
searched for additional cases of either confirmed (laboratory evidence
of infection) or probable Legionnaires' disease (pneumonia of
undetermined cause). A case-control study was conducted to compare
exposures and activities on the ship and in ports of call between each
case-passenger and two or three matched control-passengers. Water
samples from the ship, from sites on Bermuda, and from the ship's water
source in New York City were cultured for legionellae and examined with
PCR. 50 passengers with Legionnaires' disease (16 confirmed, 34
probable) were identified from nine cruises embarking between April 30
and July 9, 1994. Exposure to whirlpool spas was strongly associated
with disease (odds ratio 16.2, 95% Cl 2.8-351:7); risk of acquiring
Legionnaires' disease increased by 64% (95% Cl 12-140) for every hour
spent in the spa water. Passengers spending time around the whirlpool
spas, but not in the water, were also significantly more likely to have
acquired infection. Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 was isolated
only from the sand filter in the ship's whirlpool spa. This isolate
matched a clinical isolate from the respiratory secretions of a
case-passenger as judged by monoclonal antibody subtyping and by
arbitrarily primed PCR. This investigation shows the benefit of
obtaining a recent travel history, the usefulness or urine antigen
testing for rapid diagnosis of legionella infection, and the need for
improved surveillance for travel-related Legionnaires' disease. New
strategies for whirlpool spa maintenance and decontamination may help
to minimise transmission of legionellae from these aerosol-producing
devices.
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