Emerging Infectious Diseases (Feb 2010)

Investigating an Airborne Tularemia Outbreak, Germany

  • Anja M. Hauri,
  • Iris Hofstetter,
  • Erik Seibold,
  • Philip Kaysser,
  • Juergen Eckert,
  • Heinrich Neubauer,
  • Wolf D. Splettstoesser

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1602.081727
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 2
pp. 238 – 243

Abstract

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In November 2005, an outbreak of tularemia occurred among 39 participants in a hare hunt in Hesse, Germany. Previously reported tularemia outbreaks in Germany dated back to the 1950s. We conducted a retrospective cohort study among participants and investigated the environment to identify risk factors for infection. Ten participants had serologic evidence of acute Francisella tularensis infection; 1 other participant died before laboratory confirmation was obtained. Presence within 5 meters of the place where disemboweled hares were rinsed with a water hose was the risk factor most strongly associated with infection (risk ratio 22.1; 95% confidence interval 13.2–154.3). Swabs taken at the game chamber and water samples were PCR negative for F. tularensis. Eleven of 14 hare parts showed low-level concentrations of F. tularensis, compatible with cross-contamination. More than half of case-patients may have acquired infection through inhalation of aerosolized droplets containing F. tularensis generated during rinsing of infected hares.

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