1. Molecular Investigations of an Outbreak of Parainfluenza Virus Type 3 and Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections in a Hematology Unit
- Author
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Rebecca E. Sampson, Katherine N. Ward, Stephen Mackinnon, Hamid Jalal, Richard S. Tedder, N S Brink, David F. Bibby, and Julie Bennett
- Subjects
Adult ,Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Isolation (health care) ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections ,Biology ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Respirovirus Infections ,Virus ,Disease Outbreaks ,Virology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Infection control ,Viral shedding ,Phylogeny ,Cross Infection ,Hematology ,Base Sequence ,Outbreak ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Middle Aged ,Parainfluenza Virus 3, Human ,Respiratory Syncytial Virus, Human ,RNA, Viral ,Viral disease ,Hospital Units - Abstract
A large simultaneous outbreak of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and parainfluenza type 3 (PIV-3) infections occurred on an adult hematology unit. Implementation of enhanced infection control was complicated by cocirculation of the two different viruses, with prolonged viral shedding from infected patients, and placed great pressure on health care staff; of 27 infected hematopoietic stem cell transplant patients, 9 died, and the unit was closed for 2 months. Retrospective molecular investigation of the virus strains involved in the outbreak was performed by analyzing part of the fusion gene of PIV-3 and part of the glycoprotein gene of RSV. Reverse transcription-PCR on nasopharyngeal aspirates from patients infected before and during the simultaneous outbreak generated amplicons for sequence analysis. A single strain of RSV and a single strain of PIV-3 had spread from person to person within the unit; 7 patients were infected with RSV, 22 were infected with PIV-3, and 4 were infected with both viruses. The PIV-3 outbreak had started at the beginning of August 3 months before the RSV outbreak; it had arisen when PIV-3 was introduced from the community by a patient and passed to another patient, who became chronically infected with the identical strain and, in spite of being nursed in isolation, was most likely the source from which widespread infection occurred in November. Had these early cases been linked to a common PIV-3 strain at the time of diagnosis, enhanced infection control precautions might have prevented the eventual extensive spread of PIV-3, making it much easier to deal with the later RSV outbreak.
- Published
- 2007