Emerging Infectious Diseases (Dec 2018)

Outbreak of HIV Infection Linked to Nosocomial Transmission, China, 2016–2017

  • Xiaohong Pan,
  • Jianmin Jiang,
  • Qiaoqin Ma,
  • Jiafeng Zhang,
  • Jiezhe Yang,
  • Wanjun Chen,
  • Xiaobei Ding,
  • Qin Fan,
  • Zhihong Guo,
  • Yan Xia,
  • Shichang Xia,
  • Zunyou Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2412.180117
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 12
pp. 2141 – 2149

Abstract

Read online

On January 25, 2017, a physician from ZC Hospital in Hangzhou, China, reported to the Zhejiang Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention that a potential HIV outbreak might have occurred during lymphocyte immunotherapy (LIT) performed at the hospital on December 30, 2016. We immediately began investigating and identified the index case-patient as an LIT patient’s husband who donated lymphocytes for his wife’s LIT and later screened HIV-reactive. Subsequent contamination by a technician resulted in the potential exposure of 34 LIT patients. Acute HIV infection was diagnosed in 5 persons. Phylogenetic analysis confirmed that the HIV-1 gag, pol, and env gene sequences from the index and outbreak-related cases had >99.5% similarity. Rapid investigation and implementation of effective control measures successfully controlled the outbreak. This incident provides evidence of a lapse in infection control causing HIV transmission, highlighting the need for stronger measures to protect patients from infectious disease exposure.

Keywords