1. An Outbreak of Pneumococcal Pneumonia among Military Personnel at High Risk: Control by Low-Dose Azithromycin Postexposure Chemoprophylaxis
- Author
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Jose L. Sanchez, Gregory C. Gray, Bryan J. Alsip, Stephen C. Craig, Deborah Hastings, Shellie A. Kolavic, Margaret A. K. Ryan, and Marie K. Hudspeth
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,education ,Attack rate ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Outbreak ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Azithromycin ,medicine.disease_cause ,Surgery ,Pneumonia ,Internal medicine ,Chemoprophylaxis ,Pneumococcal pneumonia ,Streptococcus pneumoniae ,medicine ,business ,Antibacterial agent ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In the winter of 1998-1999 an outbreak of pneumococcal pneumonia occurred among Ranger students undergoing high-intensity training. Thirty pneumonia cases (attack rate = 12.6%) were identified among a group of 239 students. Eighteen students were hospitalized; Streptococcus pneumoniae-positive cultures were detected in 11 (61.1%) of these 18 hospitalized cases. Pneumococci were also identified in throat swabs of 30 (13.6%) of 221 nonhospitalized students surveyed. Serum antipneumolysin seroconversions were detected in 30 {18.3%} of 164 students tested. An association between development of serum antipneumolysin antibody and pneumococcal pharyngeal carriage/colonization was found. Of 30 seroconverters, eight (26.7%) had S. pneumoniae-positive cultures compared with only 17 (12.7%) of 134 nonseroconverters (relative risks = 2.02, 95% confidence interval = 1.02-4.02, p = 0.05), The outbreak was controlled by administrating low-dose, oral azithromycin prophylaxis (250 mg weekly for 2 weeks) and was associated with a 69% reduction in pneumococcal carriage and a 94% reduction in pneumonia rates.
- Published
- 2003
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