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Tuberculosis and Air Travel Ibrahim Abubakar, MBBS, PhD, FFPH Consultant Epidemiologist / Section Head Tuberculosis Section Respiratory and Systemic Infections Department Centre for Infections Colindale, London Talk outline Rationale Evidence base WHO Guidelines NICE HPA Interpretation
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Tuberculosis and Air TravelIbrahim Abubakar, MBBS, PhD, FFPHConsultant Epidemiologist / Section HeadTuberculosis SectionRespiratory and Systemic Infections DepartmentCentre for InfectionsColindale, London
Talk outline • Rationale • Evidence base • WHO Guidelines • NICE • HPA Interpretation
Rationale • Newsworthy - More political than public health • International – cross border
Evidence • No cases of TB disease reported among those known to have been infected with M. tuberculosis during air travel • All instances of transmission involved highly infectious (smear positive) cases • 2 of whom had MDR disease • Overall notification rate of 0.05 per 100 000 long haul passengers (BA)
UK incidents Four All had negative Mantoux
WHO Guidelines 2006 2008 1998
Infectious or potentially infectious • • Infectious TB. All cases of respiratory (pulmonary or laryngeal) TB which are sputum smear-positive and culture-positive (if culture is available). • • Potentially infectious TB. All cases of respiratory (pulmonary or laryngeal) TB which are sputum smear-negative and culture-positive (susceptible, MDR-TB or XDR-TB). • • Non-infectious TB. All cases of respiratory TB which have two consecutive negative sputum-smear and negative culture (if culture is available) results.
WHO guidelines • For travellers, Public Health Authorities, Physicians and Airlines • Pre and post travel • For Travellers • • People with infectious or potentially infectious TB should postpone all travel by commercial air transportation of any flight duration until they become non infectious.
Physicians: Pre and Post travel* • Pre-travel • • Inform all infectious and potentially infectious TB patients that they must not travel by air on any commercial flight of any duration until non infectious* • - 2 weeks of adequate treatment and they are sputum smear negative on at least two occasions • - 2 consecutive negative sputum-culture results – if MDR or XDR. • • Promptly inform the relevant public health authority when if such a TB patient intends to travel against medical advice. • • Inform the public health authority of exceptional circumstances • Post-travel • • Inform the public health authority when an infectious or potentially infectious TB patient has a history of commercial air travel within the previous 3 months. * WHO guidelines
Public Health Authorities: Pre travel* • • Inform the concerned airline of infectious and potentially infectious passengers travelling against medical advice and request that boarding be denied. • • If patient has exceptional circumstances, ensure that the airline(s) and all involved authorities have agreed the procedures for travel. * WHO guidelines
Public Health Authorities: Post Travel* • • Undertake risk assessment • • Inform all countries involved (departure and landing). • • Coordination between countries necessary. • • Share passenger information. • • Inform the National IHR Focal Point. • • Collaborate on research concerning TB and air travel. * WHO guidelines
Assessing whether contact tracing is needed* * WHO guidelines
Aircraft air flow* i.e. those passengers seated in the same row and in the two rows in front of and behind the index case * WHO guidelines
Airline companies* • Pre-travel • • Deny boarding to infectious or potentially infectious TB when requested. • • Ensure ventilation is on after 30 minutes ground delay. • • Requirements and standards for filtration systems. • • Training for cabin crews. • • Adequate emergency supplies on board • Post-travel • • Airline companies should provide all available contact information, in accordance with applicable legal requirements including the IHR. * WHO guidelines
……………. • Public health authorities may refine criteria on infectiousness according to national guidelines • Public health authorities may follow national policies and guidelines regarding TB contact investigation involving potentially exposed travellers in their jurisdiction, in accordance with requirements under the IHR
HPA Interpretation: Pre travel • Discourage all passengers with infectious or potential infectious TB from travel and inform local HPU • Where there are exceptional personal circumstance discuss with HPU
HPA Interpretation: Post travel Clinician informs HPU • Then HPU sends “inform and advise” letters to passengers in the UK • Undertake a risk assessment • Index case smear positive • Flight >8 hrs in last 3/12 • International contacts dealt with through TB Section, CfI in liaison with HPU • HPU liaises with CfI to agree which authority undertaking the investigation • Crew – inform HPU, and therefore, airline – assess as occupational / office type exposure • HPU obtains passenger details for those sitting in same, and two adjacent rows
HPA Interpretation: During Flight • Passengers and crew should be reassured • Airline should be encouraged to keep contact details to support subsequent public health action
HPA Interpretation • Draft agreed • To be published by the National Knowledge Service for TB after further review
Thank you • ……………………and now I am off to take my 8 hour train to London
* References Driver CR et al. Transmission of M. tuberculosis associated with air travel. Journal of the American Medical Association, 1994, 272:1031–1035. McFarland JW et al. Exposure to Mycobacterium tuberculosis during air travel. Lancet, 1993, 342:112–113. Exposure of passengers and flight crew to Mycobacterium tuberculosis on commercial aircraft, 1992–1995. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 1995, 44:137–140. Miller MA, Valway SE, Onorato IM. Tuberculosis risk after exposure on airplanes. Tubercle and Lung Disease, 1996, 77:414–419. Kenyon TA et al. Transmission of multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis during a long airplane flight. New England Journal of Medicine, 1996, 334:933–938. Moore M, Fleming KS, Sands L. A passenger with pulmonary/laryngeal tuberculosis: no evidence of transmission on two short flights. Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine, 1996, 67:1097–1100. Vassiloyanakopoulos A et al. A case of tuberculosis on a long-distance flight: the difficulties of the investigation. Eurosurveillance, 1999, 4(9):96-97. Chemardin J et al. Contact-tracing of passengers exposed to an extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis case during an air flight from Beirut to Paris, October 2006. Eurosurveillance, 2007, 12(12):6 December. Wang PD. Two-step tuberculin testing of passengers and crew on a commercial airplane. American Journal of Infection Control, 2000, 28(3):233–238. Parmet AJ. Tuberculosis on the flight deck. Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine, 1999, 70(8):817–818. Whitlock G, Calder L, Perry H. A case of infectious tuberculosis 16. on two longhaul aircraft flights: contact investigation. New Zealand Medical Journal, 2001, 114(1137):353–355 Tuberculosis exposure feared on India-to-U.S. flight. Clinical Infectious Diseases News, 2008, 46:1 March.