Western Pacific Surveillance and Response (Dec 2019)

Diphtheria diagnostic capacity in the Western Pacific Region

  • Santosh Gurung,
  • Amy Trindall,
  • Lucy Reeve,
  • Adroulla Efstratiou,
  • Varja Grabovac

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5365/wpsar.2019.10.2.008
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
pp. 46 – 49

Abstract

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Diphtheria is an acute infectious disease affecting the upper respiratory tract and occasionally the skin and is caused by the action of diphtheria toxin produced by Corynebacterium diphtheriae, Corynebacterium ulcerans and Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis. Corynebacterium infections are usually difficult to control due to their epidemic patterns, the emergence of new strains, novel reservoirs and their dissemination to susceptible human and animal populations.1 Although C. diphtheriae is largely controlled through mass immunization programmes, diphtheria escalated to epidemic proportions within the Russian Federation and the former Soviet Republics in the 1990s, highlighting the potential for this disease to cause morbidity and mortality when immunization programmes are disrupted.2 A recent review of global diphtheria epidemiology, which included an analysis of cases and information about age, showed age distribu­tion shifts and found that the majority of cases occur in adoles­cents and adults.3 Shifts in age distribution, from children to adolescents and adults, were observed from countries in the Western Pacific Region such as the Lao People’s Democratic Republic,4 the Philippines3 and Viet Nam.5

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