Public health agencies in five states are assessing the rabies risk
for hundreds of people who may have had close contact with an infected
organ donor and four transplant recipients, one of whom died, officials
said Saturday.
About 200 medical workers, relatives and others
were assessed for potential exposure in Maryland, where the man who
received an infected kidney died, state veterinarian Katherine Feldman
said. She said fewer than two dozen were urged to get the rabies vaccine
as a preventive measure.
In Florida, about 90 people were identified as
potentially exposed, and three were offered the rabies vaccine as of
Friday, state health department spokeswoman Ashley Carr said.
Illinois Department of Public Health spokeswoman
Melaney Arnold said the only potential exposures there were people who
worked with the patient or the transplanted organ. She said only the
organ recipient is receiving rabies treatment.
Health officials in Georgia and North Carolina are
also involved in the epidemiological investigation prompted by the
Maryland man's death from rabies in late February, nearly 18 months
after he got the kidney from a donor in Pensacola, Fla. However,
officials in those states didn't respond to requests from The Associated
Press about the number of people they're assessing.
Doctors in Florida didn't test the 20-year-old
donor for rabies before he died in September 2011. His heart, liver and
other kidney went to recipients in Florida, Georgia and Illinois. They
started getting the vaccine this month, and none has had rabies
symptoms. A rabies expert unconnected to the case, Dr. Rodney Willoughby
of Milwaukee, said they have a strong chance of surviving since they
haven't shown any symptoms.
Health officials say the virus can be spread
through the infected person's saliva and mucous membranes, but
human-to-human transmission is rare. The federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention in Atlanta says there has been only one
documented instance of transmission by a bite in the U.S.
Feldman said Friday that the search for potential
exposure subjects in Maryland was wrapping up. She said medical workers
typically take precautions, and "we don't share saliva with that many
people in our day-to-day goings about."
CDC spokeswoman Melissa Dankel said investigators
are still trying to learn how the transplant donor got infected with the
raccoon rabies virus that was found in his brain tissue and that of the
Maryland man. She said the donor was an outdoorsman who might have been
bitten by a wild animal in his native North Carolina before moving to
Florida and beginning training as an Air Force aviation mechanic 17
weeks before his death.
He visited a clinic at the Pensacola Naval Air
Station in August 2011 for abdominal pain and vomiting and was
transferred to a civilian hospital four days later, said Defense
Department spokeswoman Cynthia Smith. He later developed encephalitis, a
brain inflammation that can have a host of causes, including rabies,
but he wasn't tested for the disease, CDC officials say.
Smith said the airman died of severe
gastroenteritis - inflammation of the stomach and small intestine -
complicated by dehydration, electrolyte abnormalities and seizure. The
Florida Department of Health said he died of encephalitis of unknown
origin.
Federal rules require organ banks to disclose any
known or suspected infectious conditions that might be transmitted by
donor organs. CDC officials say they don't know what information was
communicated.
Federal guidelines published last year for
evaluating organ donors with encephalitis urge "extreme caution" if the
suspected cause is a viral pathogen, such as rabies.
Dr. Michael Green, a University of Pittsburgh
professor who heads the committee that wrote the guidelines, said the
guidelines hadn't been published when the Florida patient died. He also
said rabies transmission through solid organ transplants is rare. There
have been just two other documented instances worldwide - one in Germany
and a 2004 U.S. case in which all four recipients died. The CDC says
there have been eight documented instances of rabies being transmitted
by transplanted corneas.
"Nonetheless, if asked whether or not I would use
organs where concern for rabies was active in the potential donor, I
would urge extreme caution before using organs from this person," Green
said.
One of the patients who died in the 2004 case was
18-year-old Joshua Hightower, of Gilmer, Texas, after a kidney
transplant. He had kidney problems since he was a child. His mother,
Jennifer, said Saturday that if rabies is suspected in a transplant
donor, doctors should go ahead and transplant the organs, and then give
recipients the rabies vaccine.
"The word has got to get out there and something's
got to change," she said. "These people, like my son, he thought the
transplant was going to give him a new life and a new opportunity to
move forward, and it killed him - over somebody's negligence and their
plain old stupidity, and that's what it is."