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I've mentioned before that, whether I'm walking down the street or hiking in the wild, I can't help myself thinking of zoonotic diseases associated with every animal I see. Now I have a few more animals to add to my fauna paranoia list.

I'll be hand-wringing all this week that I won't be able to attend any of the ACIP meetings on September 18 and 19 due to other commitments. A draft agenda was posted September 12, and only 3 vaccines are being discussed: MMRV, hepatitis B, and covid. All have votes scheduled. As I said last week, I won't comment on the sessions until I've had a chance to review the recordings personally and make my own assessments; timing will depend on when CDC posts the recordings to their website.

In the meantime ...

Updates for Last Year's Flu Season

As they usually do around this time, investigators from CDC and around the country published more definitive data on hospitalizations associated with last year's flu season. As we all thought, it was fairly heavy compared to previous years (note the graph below includes all ages).

A little under one-third of these hospitalized flu patients had received a seasonal flu vaccine, on par with prior years. About 85% received antiviral medication, but the age group with the lowest treatment percentage, about 60%, were children 5 - 17 years of age. Once again, healthcare providers are presumably largely ignoring national guidelines for use of antiviral medications for influenza, though this detail is difficult to tease out from the database.

The discussion on limitations of the data was well done, typical of this influenza group, and bears listing their 5 points:

  1. influenza-associated hospitalizations rates might be underestimated because of clinician-driven influenza testing.
  2. influenza A subtype was missing for a median 56% (IQR 48%-64%; range 38%–72%) of patients, and the missingness could have been non-random. Thus the hospitalization rate estimates for A(H1N1)pdm09 and A(H3N2) subtypes derived from multiple imputation procedures using 3 predictor variables (site, age, month) are likely biased and should be interpreted cautiously. 
  3. nonclinical factors, such as hospital admission thresholds, that might have resulted in changes in the number of hospitalizations, could not be measured.
  4. because influenza vaccination history is subject to more reporting delays than other outcomes in the analysis, 28.5% of hospitalized patients were missing this season’s influenza vaccination status. 
  5. the FluSurv-NET catchment area represents 9% of the U.S. population and might not be generalizable to the entire U.S. population; hospitalization rates in this report represent the FluSurv-NET catchment area.

Consider the thoroughness of this report and its limitations while reading this next topic.

The MAHA Strategy Report

This was a follow up to the original 73-page MAHA Report from several weeks ago. The Strategy Report is only 20 pages and basically offers nothing helpful; it's just too vague and even rambling at times. I found the section on vaccines worrisome, given the leanings of the HHS Secretary. Here's the strategy plan for vaccines (page 10):

Vaccine Framework: The White House Domestic Policy Council and HHS will develop a framework focused on:

  • Ensuring America has the best childhood vaccine schedule;
  • Addressing vaccine injuries;
  • Modernizing American vaccines with transparent, gold-standard science;
  • Correcting conflicts of interest and misaligned incentives; and
  • Ensuring scientific and medical freedom.

These points are exactly what has been the status quo all along, which of course signals that definitions of "best childhood vaccine schedule" and "gold-standard science" and all the other points will change, most likely to support predetermined endpoints to decrease vaccinations overall.

This report is in striking contrast to the 2024-25 flu hospitalization report I mentioned, which still represents CDC in partnership with other sites as an exemplar for public health.

Ciprofloxacin-Resistant Neisseria meningitidis

This past week I received a letter from the Maryland Department of Health informing clinicians that the state had exceeded the CDC's resistance criteria, and that ciprofloxacin should no longer be used for prophylaxis of meningococcal disease in close contacts of a case. Ciprofloxacin may still be utilized for prophylaxis in settings where it is known that the isolate from the contact source is susceptible to ciprofloxacin or is known to be a non-serogroup Y strain. Of course, usually we don't know this at the time we need to prescribe prophylaxis. Alternatives still include rifampin, ceftriaxone, or azithromycin.

Ideally all healthcare providers should be checking with local health department experts when managing someone exposed to an individual with meningococcal disease. Please don't reflexively prescribe ciprofloxacin without checking first.

Trying to Make Sense of COVID Data

Not only has FDA and ACIP thrown covid vaccine decision-making into complete chaos, it's also becoming harder to interpret covid infection trends. With less resources to track illness combined with less public interest in testing, prevention, and treatment, comparing rates now to those in the past becomes a comparison of apples to oranges. I continue to try still, so here's my latest dive into the national surveillance, with the caveat that regional variations can be considerable.

Early indicators are trending down...

... as are hospitalizations.

All this is good news, but it gets tough when one tries to trend over time, for the reasons stated above. COVID-NET has a fun (for me, anyway) interactive dashboard. Here's what things look like over the entirety of the pandemic and afterwards.

The light blue line represents current data; I don't doubt that numbers are greatly diminished, but take exact comparisons to earlier years with a grain of salt.

Also, here's what part of the pediatric age data for the 3 youngest age groups look like:

With the same caveats about comparing data from year to year, covid-associated hospitalizations in children were most pronounced in the first year of life. Rates for older children are even lower than for the 1 - 2 year-olds.

Alaskapox eMended

In another era, I had a blog for AAP called Evidence eMended where I took deep dives into understanding how to assess original research articles on general pediatric topics to help providers develop an approach to using such articles in everyday practice. AAP eventually ended the blog, and Pediatric Infection Connection was (re)born.

Now comes an emendation (I didn't make up that word) for Alaskapox. My post of 2/11/24 covered a report of the first fatality from this viral illness, in an immuncompromised person. This week, we now have more detail about the 6 of the 7 known cases of human Alaskapox infection, now termed borealpox as part of a general movement to get away from linking geographic communities to diseases. (A famous misuse of geographic tagging is the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918-20; for true accuracy, it should have been named the Kansas flu.)

I learned about the new borealpox name in a more detailed report on infections in humans and the animal reservoirs in Alaska which are mainly small mammals. Like most orthopoxviruses (e.g. smallpox, mpox) the characteristic lesion is on the skin; this new report contains the same lesion photos as in my 2024 post which were taken from a 2/9/24 State of Alaska Epidemiology Bulletin. If you ever find yourself wandering in the interior of Alaska, watch out for these small mammals.

Mode of transmission of borealpox to humans isn't known, but all the cases reported contact with dogs and cats (and in 1 case poultry as well) that had contact with voles and other small mammals. So, their pets may have transmitted the virus to their owners. Clearly these human infections are rare, but I expect future studies of humans and animals will expand our knowledge. If you're ever "travelin' .... where the winds hit heavy on the borderline" as Bob (with help from Johnny) said, keep your dog away from the voles.

I've been a Super Bowl addict I think from Super Bowl I, persisting in spite of the fact that the NFL has done very little to limit head trauma and chronic traumatic encephalopathy. I'm usually tied to the Super Bowl screen almost continuously because I like to pay particular attention to the national anthem (more on that later) and to all the commercials. For Super Bowl LVIII I'll unfortunately need to grimace and grit my teeth when the Kansas City fans do their insensitive tomahawk chopping and war hooping.

As I rush to finish my long list of chores for today I somehow need to cull through this week's list of 16 blog topic ideas to post something with low soporific properties. Here goes.

I'm Beginning to Really Worry About Measles

It's difficult to find a central, accurate source of data, but it seems to me that an unprecedented level of sites around the world are experiencing high numbers of measles cases. Coupled with robust international travel, declining vaccine rates, and very high contagion, the US population could have a major resurgence.

An editorial in the BMJ last week (unfortunately freely available only to those with a subscription) re-sounded the alarm. The impetus was a new outbreak in the West Midlands, but really the problem has been sweeping Europe for at least a year. They quote other sources citing over 42,000 cases in European Union countries from January to November 2023, with 5 fatalities. Ireland, which had only a few measles cases in 2022 and 2023, reported the death of a middle-aged man who had visited Birmingham; no further details such as underlying risk factors are available presently. Our northern neighbors in Montreal report a measles case in an unimmunized child, likely acquired on a trip to Africa. The child's age isn't mentioned but he was apparently school-aged since a school is one of multiple sites where health authorities are trying to track down contacts.

I came across an updated measles website from the Infectious Diseases Society of America that I think is pretty helpful, including several links to other sites. Look at the Facts link for a good discussion of common measles misconceptions. And, please, please, please make sure all your eligible pediatric patients are immunized.

Speaking of Vaccine-Preventable Diseases

Diphtheria has killed 130 Somali children in the last 3 months, according to a news report. Antitoxin availability in the country is very limited. Diphtheria continues to pop up in resource-poor countries with ever-present risk of imported and then locally-acquired cases appearing in the US.

"Silent" ARF

A new study carried out in Sudan informed me about the existence of "silent" acute rheumatic fever. The investigators performed handheld echocardiography testing on 400 febrile children 3-18 years of age who did not have a definite etiology for their fever. Of 281 children who had no clinical features of ARF, 44 had evidence of rheumatic heart disease on echocardiogram. This is an interesting diagnostic intervention that could prove practical for use in high risk ARF countries, but costs and training could be significant barriers.

Thankfully we don't have much of a rheumatic fever problem in the US, likely because most endemic US group A streptococcal strains are unlikely to trigger ARF. However, imported strains certainly pose a risk, and evaluation of any suspected ARF case should take into account travel history/country of origin.

More on Treatment of Hearing Loss in Congenital CMV Infection

Last week I mentioned a small phase 2 study of late, short course treatment for children with hearing loss likely due to congenital CMV infection; it didn't work. Now this week we have a report of a small phase 3 study in the Netherlands. It was an unusual circumstance where a randomized trial was converted to a non-randomized trial because the original trial floundered due to lack of enrollment; most parents wanted their children to receive treatment. In the new study, children with hearing loss but otherwise clinically silent congenital CMV infection received either 6 weeks of oral valganciclovir (n=25) or no treatment (n=15). They were followed until 18-22 months of age, and the treatment group had less hearing deterioration than did the control group. Not the cleanest study but a better design overall than was the US study, and it did find evidence of benefit. This also points out the great difficulty in conducting these trials; even though congenital CMV infection is very common and virtually all US infants are screened for hearing loss, it's very difficult to enroll and follow-up these children in randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trials. We still don't have a definitive answer on treatment benefits for isolated hearing loss in congenital CMV, but I hope the investigators don't give up trying.

Alaskapox

No, I didn't make up that word, it's a real orthopoxvirus that can rarely infect humans mostly in, you guessed it, Alaska. Only 7 human cases are known to exist, but the most recent one, in an immunocompromised man, was fatal. The report also is striking for how long it took to diagnose him. The virus mainly infects small mammals (voles, shrews) with no known human-to-human transmission so far. However, there is no reason it wouldn't be spread from another human, just like other viruses (smallpox, cowpox, Mpox) in the same family.

Photo from https://health.alaska.gov/dph/Epi/id/SiteAssets/Pages/Alaskapox/Alaskapox-FAQ.pdf.

New Syphilis Testing Guidance

CDC released new recommendations for laboratory testing for syphilis, good timing given our terrible syphilis epidemic in the US. It is highly technical, so mostly of interest to laboratorians and syphilis geeks like me. Some of the illustrations and graphs are useful for everyone. Here is a nice quick view of lab test results in various syphilis stages:

And an explanation of the prozone effect, very important and something that I've found not all hospital clinical lab personnel understand. It appears mostly with RPR testing, where very high antibody levels cause a false negative result unless the assay is run at higher dilutions.

WRIS

Not a whole lot new with the Winter Respiratory Infection Season.

Investigators in France reported that rhinovirus infection in infants was a major contributor to bronchiolitis hospitalizations pre- and during the pandemic. Here's an example of ventilator use for RSV and rhinovirus during 2019 - 2020.

From a practical standpoint we have a tough time sorting this out with commercially-available testing. PCR testing for rhinovirus uses primers that include most enteroviruses, so you will always see these results combined as rhinovirus/enterovirus with no way to separate out which is which. The problem is compounded because most enteroviruses normally persist in the body and in nasal secretions weeks to months after the clinical illness resolves. So, a positive rhino/enterovirus test might reflect an infection that a) occurred months previously, and b) could have been asymptomatic (90+% of enteroviral infections are asymptomatic). Often we can guess rhinoviruses are active if we see a mid-winter bump in rhino/entero positivity, since the usual enterovirus epidemic peak is late summer/early fall.

Of note, the French investigators did not provide details of the PCR assay used in their study, so we are left trusting the journal editors that it did reliably distinguish rhinoviruses from enteroviruses.

RSV is pretty clearly on the way out, though still causing a lot of illness nationwide. The decline is present in all 7 monitoring sites.

Influenza also is declining, with a couple caveats.

First, we are starting to see a higher percentage of influenza B isolates now. This typically happens near the end of flu season, but it could also produce a secondary bump in infections. Second, local and regional flu levels are quite variable - what's true for Maryland is completely different in New Mexico. Also, I've never been a fan of presenting city-level (NYC, DC) data in the same context as state data - a classic apples and oranges comparison.

Covid wastewater data continue to be encouraging.

We also have a few new updates on the covid scene. The UK released their spring vaccine recommendations which are to offer vaccine (usually mRNA XBB.1.5 vaccine unless not suitable for an individual) to adults 75 years of age and older, residents in adult care homes for older people, and anyone 6 months of age or older fulfilling their definition of immunosuppression.

I was pleased to see an update on trying to get a handle on Postacute Sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 in Children (PASC), though as I read through it I still felt it was a difficult jumble of clinical syndromes that make it hard to develop practical management advice anytime soon. Here's an overview of their conceptual model:

I applaud the investigators for continuing to slog through this and I do expect to see concrete advice sometime in the future, not only for PASC but perhaps for all those other post-infections syndromes currently lumped into the myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome wastebasket.

Birdhouse Update

I'm sure everyone has been waiting to hear the latest update in my birdhouse squirrel-proofing adventures. I'm happy to say the birds are back, but so far no squirrels are stealing the birdseed! I did notice one dastardly Scurius representative sitting on the large branch from which the birdhouse was suspended, but it never made an attempt to jump. We'll see how long this holds up.

White-breasted nuthatch enjoying the sun and safflower seeds, unmolested by squirrels.

Super Bowl VIII

Yes, I'm aware it's now LVIII, but much of my Super Bowl roots go back to the one 50 years ago where I happened to be employed selling beer in the stands. I didn't make much money; I was assigned to the Vikings side of the stadium, and they got blown out by the Dolphins and quit buying. I also didn't see much of the game itself due to walking up and down the stands, yelling "cold beer" and looking for raised hands.

I was required to show up several hours before kickoff time, and the stadium was virtually empty. One person on the field that morning happened to be one of my personal heroes, the country singer Charley Pride. (As an ironic note to me, he died of covid complications at age 86, in the first year of the pandemic and before vaccine availability.)

Pride was really the only Black person to have broken through as a country music star at the time, and he was practicing singing the national anthem which he would do at the start of the game. When he finished practicing I walked down to the field level and he was kind enough to chat with me a few minutes. He autographed my flimsy paper vender tag, now lost somewhere during my many moves.

As you can tell, I haven't lost that 50-year-old wonderful memory. Kiss an angel good mornin' if you have a chance. 😉