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IDSA: Outbreak of Severe Pneumonia Traced to Adenovirus 14

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  • IDSA: Outbreak of Severe Pneumonia Traced to Adenovirus 14

    <table bgcolor="white" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"><tbody><tr><td width="8">
    </td> <td colspan="3" class="large_head2" valign="top">IDSA: Outbreak of Severe Pneumonia Traced to Adenovirus 14


    SAN DIEGO -- A potentially deadly form of community-acquired pneumonia linked to adenovirus type 14 has emerged in the Pacific northwest, according to a report presented here.


    By Charles Bankhead, Staff Writer, MedPage Today
    Reviewed by Robert Jasmer, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco
    October 09, 2007

    SAN DIEGO, Oct. 9

    A potentially deadly form of community-acquired pneumonia linked to adenovirus type 14 has emerged in the Pacific northwest, according to a report presented here.

    <o:p></o:p> Action Points
    • Explain to interested patients that a severe form of community-acquired pneumonia has been associated with a previously uncommon form of viral infection.<o:p></o:p>
    • Note that most cases reported thus far have been in Oregon, but that does not exclude the possibility that the virus is infecting people in other parts of the country.<o:p></o:p>
    • Point out that the findings were reported at a medical conference and as a published abstract and should be considered preliminary until they have appeared in a peer-reviewed journal.<o:p></o:p>

    <o:p></o:p> First encountered in 2005 in Oregon, the viral pneumonia frequently leads to hospitalization and has a 20% fatality rate, Paul Lewis, M.D., of the Oregon State Public Health Department said s at the Infectious Diseases Society of America meeting.

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    "We recommend obtaining a viral culture in pneumonia patients who lack a specific etiology, especially those with severe disease," said Dr. Lewis. "If adenovirus 14 is detected, anticipate a stormy course. We encourage an infectious disease consultation to discuss the risks and benefits of any specific therapy that might be contemplated."<o:p></o:p>
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    Recognition of the adenoviral pneumonia began with four patients hospitalized simultaneously at a Portland hospital. Upon comparing notes with physicians at area hospitals, Dr. Lewis and colleagues "almost fell out of our chairs because every hospital we called had recent severe and fatal cases of adenovirus disease."

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    Investigators followed up the informal communication with a systematic review of all cases of adenovirus disease identified by Oregon clinical laboratories from November 2006 to April 2007. Six months of active surveillance revealed what appeared to be a winter-spring predominant adenovirus disease, as the number of reported cases increased from January through April.

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    Isolates from the sickest patients were sent to the CDC, which found that almost all the cases involved adenovirus 14, a serotype identified more than 50 years ago but rarely detected since then and never in association with outbreaks.

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    Dr. Lewis and colleagues at the state health department reviewed analyzed specimens dating back to 1993 and found a few cases of adenoviral disease almost every year. Beginning in 2005 adenovirus 14 was the predominant serotype identified.

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    Comparison of 31 patients with adenovirus 14 disease and 14 patients with other adenovirus serotypes showed that adenovirus 14 tended to infect older men (median age 52.9), and almost half the cases involved smokers. Most strikingly, adenovirus 14 was associated with a hospitalization odds ratio of 15.9 compared with other adenovirus serotypes.

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    The most common clinical features leading to diagnosis of adenovirus 14 disease were fever (~80%), tachypnea (75% to 80%), hypoxia (~50%), and hypotension (40% to 45%). Chest x-rays were abnormal in 23 of 24 cases. Radiographic progression was common, including single-lobe disease to multilobe in 55% of cases and lobar disease to adult respiratory distress syndrome in 45%.

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    All patients received broad-spectrum antibiotics. Dr. Lewis said 22 of the 31 patients with adenovirus 14 disease were hospitalized, and 16 required ICU care. Median hospital and ICU length of stay was seven days. Of the patients treated in the ICU, 13 required ventilatory support and eight had severe hypotension requiring pressor drugs. Seven patients (22%) died.

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    Risk factors for death or ICU care were a creatinine level greater than 1.2 mg/dL, lymphocyte count less than 100 ?L, and coinfection with another pathogen. None of those factors remained statistically significant in multivariate analysis.

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    "This came out of nowhere in 2005 in Oregon," said Dr. Lewis. Acknowledging that almost all of the cases have involved severe illness, he agreed that the scope of the problem could be much larger and involve a broader spectrum of illness severity.

    <o:p></o:p>
    <o:p></o:p>
    <table style="border: 1px solid rgb(141, 171, 188); padding: 5px; font-family: arial; font-size: 12px; background-color: rgb(219, 233, 242);" cellspacing="0" hspace="1"> <tbody><tr><td>Dr. Lewis reported no conflicts. David Gilbert, M.D., an investigator in the study, disclosed consulting relationships with Schering-Plough and Pfizer and speaker fees from Merck, Wyeth, and GlaxoSmithKline.<o:p></o:p> </td></tr></tbody></table>


    Complete IDSA Coverage

    Primary source: Infectious Diseases Society of America
    Source reference:
    Lewis P, et al. "Adenovirus 14: a new cause of severe community-acquired pneumonia." Infectious Diseases Society of America 45<sup>th</sup> Annual Meeting. Oct. 4-7, 2007. San Diego. Final Program and Abstracts. Abstract LB-5.<o:p></o:p>

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  • #2
    Re: IDSA: Outbreak of Severe Pneumonia Traced to Adenovirus 14

    .....almost all the cases involved adenovirus 14, a serotype identified more than 50 years ago but rarely detected since then and never in association with outbreaks.
    Could this be due to use of Pneumovax shots (just like the new - but different - strain in children) - another case of eliminating (via vaccination) the strongest pathogen and leaving the door wide open for the weaker strains to fill the void?

    .
    "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: IDSA: Outbreak of Severe Pneumonia Traced to Adenovirus 14

      Originally posted by AlaskaDenise View Post
      Could this be due to use of Pneumovax shots (just like the new - but different - strain in children).
      A different strain of adenovirus in children because of Pneumovax -
      aren't the number of population who take Pneumovax only a minority, and consequently Pneumovax effects have a small induction potentiality to start a secondary new strain?
      Maybe a result of experiments with adenovirus?

      Severe Pneumonia Traced to Adenovirus 14 = very bad news

      If that circulate wider now, are the deaths in Panama realy a result of malnutrition?

      ... the presence of a respiratory virus, with a predominance of a type of adenovirus, for which there is no vaccine ...
      ... during the period 20 to 30 Sep 2007
      (from FT: Re: Mystery disease strikes remote area of Panama)
      ______
      UN says Panama mystery disease is malnutrition
      The U.N. has dismissed Panama's claims it is fighting a mystery respiratory illness that has killed at least 10 people, saying the deaths are linked to malnutrition.
      Posted: Saturday, October 6, 2007,

      Comment

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