Cruise ship outbreak May 2003
More than 9.4 million passengers traveled on
pleasure cruises departing from North American
ports in 2004, an increase of 13% since 2003 and
41% since 2001.1 Cruise ships typically transport
closed populations of thousands of persons, often
from diverse parts of the world. Travelers are
at risk for becoming ill while on board, most
commonly from person-to-person spread of viral
gastrointestinal illnesses. Certain environmental
organisms, such as Legionella spp., pose a risk
to vulnerable passengers. During November 2003–May
2004, eight cases of Legionnaires disease (LD)
among persons who had recently traveled on cruise
ships were reported to CDC. This report describes
these cases to raise clinician awareness of the
potential for cruise-ship–associated LD
and to emphasize the need for identification and
reporting of cases to facilitate investigation.
LD is a severe community– or health-care–associated
pneumonia caused by Legionella spp., most commonly
L. pneumonia. LD can result from inhalation or
aspiration of warm (25°C–42°C),
aerosolized water containing Legionella. Symptoms
typically begin 2-10 days after exposure. Person-to-person
transmission does not occur. Because symptoms
of LD (e.g., fever, cough, or chest pain) are
nonspecific, LD cannot be reliably distinguished
from other forms of pneumonia on the basis of
clinical presentation alone.
In the United States, LD can be reported to CDC
through two surveillance systems. The National
Electronic Telecommunications System for Surveillance
collects information on all reportable diseases
from state and territorial health departments
but does not collect information on travel history.
In contrast, the paper-based Legionnaires Disease
Reporting System collects details of any recent
travel from LD patients but receives data on only
a fraction of the total cases estimated to occur.
The cases described in this report were initially
relayed to CDC by direct communication from state
health departments, cruise lines, and the European
Working Group for Legionella Infections (EWGLI),
which operates a surveillance scheme (EWGLINET)
for LD among European travelers (http://www.ewgli.org).
Cases were defined as laboratory-confirmed LD
in a person with cruise-ship travel during the
10 days before symptom onset. Exposure history
was collected by the state and local health departments,
and environmental samples, when obtained, were
tested by contractors hired by the cruise lines.
The eight cases were among passengers who had
been aboard five different cruise ships and associated
with seven different voyages. Two of the eight
cases occurred on the same voyage. The mean age
of the patients was 55.8 years (range: 23-76 years).
Five (63%) were male; seven (88%) were U.S. residents.
The sole case in a foreign traveler occurred in
a Dutch woman aged 23 years who had onset of fever
and cough 4 days after returning from a cruise
in the Caribbean. Two (25%) cases were fatal.
Of the seven patients with known medical histories,
six (86%) had comorbidities or risk behaviors
known to be risk factors for LD (e.g., diabetes,
history of heart disease, or smoking). The mean
time from cruise-ship boarding to onset of symptoms
was 10.4 days (range: 4-16 days). Although two
passengers had symptoms before the end of their
respective cruises, only one had LD diagnosed
while still aboard the ship. Seven (88%) were
diagnosed by urinary antigen testing for Legionella
pneumophila serogroup 1 (Lp1). The only person
with LD diagnosed by a fourfold increase in anti-Legionella
spp. serology had a negative Legionella urinary
antigen test. Only the Dutch traveler had a culture
for Legionella obtained at the onset of illness.
The culture was positive for Lp1; a urinary antigen
test also was positive.
Two cases occurred on each of three cruise ships.
Two patients were aboard the same ship during
the same period but had been friends preceding
the cruise and therefore had other exposures in
common. A definite source of exposure could not
be identified for any of the cases because of
the limited number of cases. In addition, all
but one patient lacked a clinical isolate, limiting
the ability to link clinical and environmental
isolates. For the Dutch passenger, the sole patient
with a clinical isolate, environmental sampling
was performed, but no matching environmental isolate
was identified. Additional case-finding measures
included review of infirmary records by cruise
lines and CDC, passive surveillance by cruise
lines, public health alerts via the Epidemic Information
Exchange (Epi-X), and notifications to EWGLI in
the event vacationing European travelers had become
ill. Despite these activities, no other cases
were identified.
Reported by:
_C Joseph, DrPH, EWGLINET, London, England. J
van Wijngaarden, MD, Dutch Ministry of Health,
Welfare, and Sport. P Mshar, MPH, Connecticut
Dept of Health. C Oravetz, Flagler County Health
Dept, Bunnell, Florida; AM Fix, MPH, Florida Dept
of Health. CA Genese, MBA, New Jersey Dept of
Health and Senior Svcs. GS Johnson, M Kacica,
MD, New York State Dept of Health. B Weant, Guilford
County Dept of Public Health, Greensboro, North
Carolina; P Jenkins, EdD, North Carolina Dept
of Health and Human Svcs. N Baker, MPH, Philadelphia
Dept of Health. D Forney, J Ames, MPH, G Vaughan,
MPH, Jon Schnoor, Vessel Sanitation Program, National
Center for Environmental Health; D Kim, MD, M
Guerra, DVM, Div of Global Migration and Quarantine;
B Fields, PhD, M Moore, MD, Div of Bacterial and
Mycotic Diseases, National Center for Infectious
Diseases; C Newbern, PhD, M Thigpen, MD, EIS officers,
CDC.
_CDC Editorial Note:
_During 1980-1998, CDC received an average of
360 paper-based reports of LD annually, primarily
during summer months.2 However, previous research
using population-based active surveillance estimated
that 8,000-18,000 cases of Legionella spp. infection
requiring hospitalization occur in the United
States annually, suggesting that legionellosis
is underdiagnosed and/or underreported.3 Since
the first recognized outbreak of LD occurred in
1976 among persons attending the American Legion
convention in Philadelphia, travel has been identified
as a risk factor for both outbreak-associated4
and sporadic infection.5 However, for multiple
reasons, outbreaks of travel-associated legionellosis
are difficult to detect and investigate.6-7 First,
trends toward empirical use of antimicrobial agents
have led to declines in diagnostic testing for
etiologic agents of community-acquired pneumonia.8
Second, the incubation period of 2-10 days allows
travelers to return home before they have symptoms,
making it unlikely for a medical provider to see
more than a single case. Third, because LD can
be diagnosed within hours of specimen collection
by urine antigen testing, diagnosis by culture,
which requires several days, has declined substantially
in recent years.2
The lack of clinical isolates hinders epidemiologic
investigations and prevention strategies. Legionella
spp. can be identified by culture in up to 40%
of freshwater environmental samples and in up
to 80% of environmental samples by polymerase
chain reaction.9 Although Lp1 causes approximately
70% of cases, at least 22 species of Legionella
have been associated with disease in humans.9
To determine which of many potential environmental
Legionella spp. is the causative organism, a clinical
isolate from a respiratory culture must be matched
to the environmental isolate by monoclonal antibody
subtyping or by molecular methods. For these reasons,
when evaluating a patient with suspected LD, clinicians
should obtain a travel history and collect respiratory
secretions for culture, in addition to collecting
urine for antigen testing.
Reporting of LD is mandatory in every state. However,
dispersion of travelers to multiple states after
an exposure might result in a health department
receiving only one report in association with
a particular ship or hotel. Cruise-ship–
associated travel poses additional difficulties
for notification and investigation of LD cases.
For cruise ships that sail in international waters,
patients might be hospitalized in other countries,
delaying or precluding reporting to authorities
in the patients' home countries. Because travelers
often stay in hotels before or after cruise-ship
travel and often disembark at various international
ports of call during a cruise, numerous potential
sources exist for authorities to investigate.
In certain instances, cruise-ship travel might
be of insufficient duration (e.g., a single day
or overnight trip) to be inclusive of the 2-10-day
incubation period of LD. In addition, the limited
number of reported cases associated with cruises
limits the ability of traditional epidemiologic
methods to identify a source. Thus, the task of
identifying a source often relies on matching
a clinical isolate to an environmental isolate.
However, few cases have been reported for which
an environmental isolate identified from a cruise
ship (most often from a whirlpool spa) was identical
to a clinical isolate from an ill passenger.6-7
Obtaining a clinical isolate from a patient with
travel-associated LD is essential to identifying
the source of infection.
Public health programs have focused on reducing
the risk for LD among cruise-ship passengers.
In 1994, CDC investigated an LD outbreak on board
a cruise ship and subsequently issued recommendations
to reduce transmission of Legionella spp. from
shipboard whirlpool spas.10 In addition, CDC's
Vessel Sanitation Program regularly conducts inspections
of these spas and other environmental sources.
Given the difficulties in confirming cases of
LD, cooperation of clinicians and local, national,
and international public health agencies is essential
to foster diagnosis and prevention. Because a
single case of LD in a traveler might indicate
an outbreak, prompt recognition and direct reporting
to local, state, and federal officials can prevent
additional cases of travel-associated illness.
_REFERENCES
_1. US Department of Transportation. Maritime
Administration. Data and statistics: cruise passenger
statistics. Available at http://www.marad.dot.gov/marad_statistics.
2. Benin AL, Benson RF, Besser RE. Trends in Legionnaires
disease, 1980-1998: declining mortality and new
patterns of diagnosis. Clin Infect Dis. 2002;35:1039-1046.
FULL TEXT | ISI | PUBMED
3. Marston BJ, Plouffe JF, File TM, et al. Incidence
of community-acquired pneumonia requiring hospitalization:
results of a population-based active surveillance
study in Ohio. Arch Intern Med. 1997;157:1709-1718.
ABSTRACT
4. Fraser DW, Tsai TR, Orenstein W, et al. Legionnaires'
disease: description of an epidemic of pneumonia.
N Engl J Med. 1977;297:1189-1197. ABSTRACT
5. Straus WL, Plouffe JF, File TM, et al. Risk
factors for domestic acquisition of Legionnaires
disease. Arch Intern Med. 1996;156:1685-1692.
ABSTRACT
6. Jernigan DB, Hofmann J, Cetron MS, et al. Outbreak
of Legionnaires' disease among cruise ship passengers
exposed to a contaminated whirlpool spa. Lancet.
1996;347:494-499. FULL TEXT | ISI | PUBMED
7. Ricketts K, Joseph C, European Working Group
for Legionella Infections. Travel-associated Legionnaires'
disease in Europe: 2003. Euro Surveill. 2004;9:40-43.
PUBMED
8. Bartlett JG. Decline in microbial studies for
patients with pulmonary infections. Clin Infect
Dis. 2004;39:170-172. FULL TEXT | ISI | PUBMED
9. Fields BS. Legionellae and Legionnaires' disease.
In: Hurst CJ, Crawford RL, Knudsen GR, McInerney
MJ, Stetzenbach LD, eds. Manual of environmental
microbiology. 2nd Edition. Washington, DC: ASM
Press; 2001:666.
10. CDC. Final recommendations to minimize transmission
of Legionnaires' disease from whirlpool spas on
cruise ships. Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health
and Human Services, CDC; 1997.
Car plant workers in ohio 2001
During March 12-15, 2001, four cases of Legionnaires'
disease (LD) among workers at an automotive engine
manufacturing plant (plant X) were reported to
the Cuyahoga County Board of Health, Cleveland,
Ohio; all four diagnoses were confirmed by Legionella
urine antigen. Illness onset among the four workers
occurred during March 2-4; two workers died. Beginning
March 14, CDC assisted state and local health
departments with an investigation to identify
new cases and potential sources of Legionella
transmission in the plant. This report summarizes
the investigation; findings indicate an epidemiologic
association with exposure to one of the plant
finishing lines but did not identify a specific
source.
Plant X manufactures cast iron engine components,
is operated by approximately 2500 employees, and
covers approximately 1.6 million square feet of
floor space. The plant is divided into four areas:
core making, mold production, iron melting, and
finishing. A confirmed case of LD was defined
as radiograph-confirmed pneumonia and laboratory
evidence of Legionella infection, defined as a
positive Legionella urine antigen or isolation
of Legionella from respiratory secretions or lung
tissue. Specimens from the four initial case-patients
were sent to CDC for isolation of Legionella;
available specimens included one sputum specimen,
one broncho-alveolar lavage specimen, and lung
tissue from the two decedents. Active LD surveillance
was established in all hospitals in the greater
Cleveland area. Hospital records and plant X employee
absentee records were reviewed to identify additional
cases. An environmental investigation was conducted
to identify aerosol-producing water sources for
Legionella transmission, including cooling towers,
water hoses, and water heaters.
No additional confirmed LD cases were identified
among the workers. Nine workers from plant X were
hospitalized during February 14–March 28;
four had pneumonia, and all nine had negative
Legionella urine antigen tests. Legionella pneumophila,
serogroup 1, was isolated from a worker's sputum
sample, which was stored at 40°F (4°C)
for greater than1 week before culture. Results
are pending from lung tissue samples. Legionella
was isolated from 18 (9%) of 197 environmental
samples, and at least five species were identified.
Three samples grew L. pneumophila, serogroup 1;
none matched the clinical isolate by monoclonal
antibody staining.
A case-control study was conducted to determine
risk factors for exposure to Legionella among
plant workers. A case-patient was defined as a
worker at plant X during February 14–March
28 who had either a confirmed case of LD or a
possible case of legionellosis. A possible case-patient
of legionellosis was defined as a worker with
a titer of anti-legionella IgG antibody 1:1024
and any two of the following symptoms: cough,
shortness of breath, fever, headache, myalgia,
or fatigue. Controls were randomly selected workers
with fewer than two symptoms and IgG antibody
1:64. Serologic specimens were collected 4-5 weeks
after the presumed exposure. Each study participant
was asked detailed questions about time spent
inside and outside of the plant and information
about underlying medical conditions associated
with LD.
Among 855 workers who were contacted, 484 (57%)
agreed to participate in the case-control study;
11 met case criteria (four confirmed and seven
possible cases), and 105 met criteria for controls.
Visiting one of the finishing lines in the plant
(odds ratio [OR] = 15.1; 95% confidence interval
[CI] = 3.0-76.2) and working in the finishing
region of the plant (OR = 3.8; CI = 1.0-13.8)
were associated with disease.
Plant X was closed during March 14-19 to facilitate
environmental sampling and decontamination. All
water systems were decontaminated, and ongoing
environmental surveillance for Legionella was
implemented throughout the plant, including the
finishing area. Sources of aerosolized water from
the finishing area that had been sampled before
decontamination did not yield cultures positive
for Legionella. On the basis of the case-control
study results, additional environmental samples
were collected in the finishing area on April
14; all samples were negative for Legionella.
County health officials are obtaining maintenance
records from the implicated area of plant X to
determine how transmission might have occurred.
_Reported by:
T Allan, T Horgan, H Scaife, Cuyahoga County Board
of Health, Cleveland; E Koch, S Nowicki, MK Parrish,
E Salehi, Ohio Dept of Health. Respiratory Diseases
Br, Div of Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases, National
Center for Infectious Diseases; Hazard Evaluations
and Technical Assistance Br, Div of Surveillance,
Hazard Evaluations and Field Studies, National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health;
and EIS officers, CDC.
_CDC Editorial Note:
Industrial plants can be a source for the propagation
and transmission of Legionella. The identification
of L. pneumophila in the environmental samples
demonstrated that legionellae can survive in this
work environment. The tightly clustered onset
of illness, lack of other epidemiologic associations
among the four confirmed patients besides working
in plant X, and the results of the case-control
study implicated a particular finishing line within
the plant as the likely source of Legionella.
The narrow period of illness onset and the failure
to identify new cases among plant workers suggest
that exposure to the infecting Legionella strain
was short-lived and transient, which may explain
the failure to find an environmental sample that
matched the clinical isolate.
LD outbreaks have been reported in industrial
settings, including an automotive plant where
workers were exposed to contaminated metal-working
fluids,1 factories that used water to cool molded
plastics,2 and waste-water treatment facilities.3
In each setting, an aerosol-producing device was
implicated. Guidelines to minimize the risk for
Legionella transmission in these sites are available.4
In addition to LD, clinicians should consider
hypersensitivity pneumonitis, metal fume fever,
and humidifier fever as possible diagnoses of
an acute febrile respiratory illness with systemic
symptoms in persons who work in an industrial
setting.5
Legionella species are estimated to account for
2%-15% of all community-acquired pneumonia; however,
only 1200-1500 cases are reported annually.6,7
Appropriate diagnostic testing for LD includes
Legionella urine antigen and culture of respiratory
secretions. Legionella urine antigen tests provide
rapid and accurate diagnosis of disease caused
by L. pneumophila, serogroup 1; however, these
tests do not identify less common species or serogroups
and do not provide an isolate necessary to compare
clinical with environmental isolates during outbreak
investigations. LD also can be diagnosed by a
four-fold rise in anti-legionella antibody titer
or by direct fluorescent antibody on sputum samples,
although the latter method lacks specificity and
sensitivity. In addition to testing for Legionella
urine antigen, the diagnosis and investigation
of LD cases would be improved if clinicians obtained
respiratory specimens for culture by a laboratory
proficient in Legionella isolation. To facilitate
appropriate investigation and improve understanding
of disease associated with Legionella species,
health-care providers should report legionellosis
cases to county or state health departments, and
state health departments should report legionellosis
cases to CDC.
Murcia Spain outbreak
This LD outbreak is the largest to date in the
world, with 449 confirmed cases and an estimated
total number of cases of 650. The reported case-fatality
rate (1%) is much lower than those observed in
other community outbreaks.This rate can be attributed,
at least partially, to the quick detection of
the outbreak, early diagnosis of the disease,
and appropriate treatment of patients. The explosive
quality of the outbreak not only led patients
to seek quick assistance at hospital emergency
units but also helped clinicians to perform an
accurate diagnosis and to immediately initiate
adequate treatment, factors reported as linked
to low case fatality.This explosive appearance
could also be related to a lower presence of predisposing
factors in case-patients in comparison with other
community outbreaks,[which could also partially
explain the low case-fatality rate.
The initial investigation encountered obstacles,
such as a large number of potential sources of
environmental contamination located in the northern
part of the city and the absence of environmental
Legionella isolates identical to those of patients.
The case-control study showed a significant association,
with a high consistency between the analyzed models
and with a high magnitude of association, between
passing through the zone around hospital H and
being ill with LD. Results were similar even when
the area radius was expanded to 400 m. However,
large overlap of areas was observed within this
radius, and multicollinearity among zones was
a common finding.
The case-control study was designed to select
patients residing outside the city of Murcia.
We decided on this approach for two reasons. First,
the incidence of LD was almost 1% in some neighborhoods,
a rate within the 0.1% to 5% attack rate described
for this disease. Therefore, all the persons living
in these quarters could possibly have been exposed
to Legionella, as has been described in outbreaks
of other transmissible diseases. If everyone had
been exposed, finding incidence differences between
persons exposed and those not exposed would have
been almost impossible. Second, persons residing
outside the city would probably have a more accurate
memory of the itineraries they followed in Murcia
some weeks previously and would probably have
a lesser number of routes than persons living
within the city. Conducting 255 personal interviews
with questions about itineraries within 2 weeks
from the last case and 4 weeks from the outbreak
onset may also have been important to our findings.
One concern in case-control studies is that participation
rate is not reported consistently. Indeed, this
information is usually omitted in case-control
studies of outbreaks, especially when controls
are selected from a population database, as was
our situation. A further complication was that
the study had to be conducted in July, when many
people go on holiday. In spite of achieving the
participation of one in two controls whom we initially
selected, we evaluated possible selection bias.
We determined that it was unlikely to have occurred
since neither socioeconomic status nor predisposing
risk factors for LD differed significantly among
cases and controls. Information bias overestimating
this outcome was ruled out since news media did
not mention hospital H among the probable sources
of the outbreak.
Meteorologic conditions were favorable for the
emission of aerosols to be dispersed in a horizontal
manner. Low wind speed together with atmospheric
thermal inversion between June 29 and July 1 would
have facilitated the presence of the aerosols
in the environment.
The result of the epidemiologic study was subsequently
confirmed by the isolation of a strain retrieved
on October 30 from a sample from one of the cooling
towers of the same hospital; that strain is identical
to the strain isolated from the patients. The
difficulties found previously in the isolation
of this strain were not unexpected. The day after
the outbreak was detected, when the first sample
was taken, the cooling towers of hospital H were
highly chlorinated, which could explain why these
first samples gave negative results. Later samples
retrieved on four different dates between July
28 and September 13 showed positive results to
L. pneumophila but were characterized as different
strains from those from patients. This strain
was only isolated upon the restarting of one tower
after it was shut down for more than 1 month,
a condition that favors the reappearance of Legionella.The
fact that the same clone of Legionella can be
found in an installation for long periods is also
documented.The possible contamination of the tower
by new Legionella from the water supply was ruled
out since the strain linked to the outbreak was
not found in samples collected from many other
installations during the same period, including
July to November.
The coincidence of a nosocomial LD outbreak in
hospital H reinforces the previous hypothesis.
A nosocomial outbreak of LD as part of a wider
community outbreak of the disease has been described,
although in other outbreaks originating in the
cooling towers of a hospital no cases of nosocomial
LD were identified.The use of double HEPA filters
on air-intake vents in some hospitals could justify,
at least in part, these contradictory observations.
Our research indicates that the cooling towers
of a hospital located in the northeastern part
of the city of Murcia were the origin of this
community outbreak. This study underlines important
risk factors that must be taken into account to
prevent a new LD outbreak. First, cooling towers
had to be identified by aerial and direct inspection
in the absence of any census of such installations.
Second, the size, location, and state of maintenance
of cooling towers are very important. In contrast
with epidemics associated with relatively small
systems, this outbreak was related to a large
refrigeration system that seems to have infected
patients up to 1.3 km downwind to the west from
the cooling tower; this finding suggests that
airborne infection with L. pneumophila may extend
over a large distance from the dissemination source,
as has been reported elsewhere. Although most
of the installations in the area showed inadequate
maintenance, the cooling towers from hospital
H were poorly maintained and had a high-risk size
and location. Once the outbreak was identified,
urgent measures were undertaken to clean, disinfect,
or close possibly contaminated sources. The cooling
tower that was the source of the outbreak was
subsequently replaced by an air-cooled system.
Before June 2001, no specific national legislation
existed in Spain concerning LD, although a recommendation
guide and legislation existed in several Spanish
autonomous regions that had had community LD outbreaks.
As an immediate consequence of this outbreak,
a national law about prevention and control of
LD was enacted in Spain 20 days after the outbreak
began. The extent of this outbreak is useful to
assess the relative role of cooling towers as
a source of LD and highlights the importance of
prioritizing control measures related to cooling
towers among strategies to prevent LD in the community.
Compliance with these measures would help to reduce
not only community outbreaks but also, perhaps,
sporadic cases that could be due to infected cooling
towers.