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Tularemia Outbreak, Bulgaria, 1997–2005
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     National Center for Infectious and Parasitic Diseases, Sofia, Bulgaria

    The George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA

    The 1997–2005 tularemia outbreak in Bulgaria affected 285 people. Ten strains were isolated from humans, a tick, a hare, and water. Amplified fragment length polymorphism typing of the present isolates and of the strain isolated in 1962 suggests that a new genetic variant caused the outbreak.

    Tularemia is a zoonotic disease caused by the gram-negative bacterium Francisella tularensis (1). During the last 10 years, several outbreaks occurred in different countries, causing tularemia to become a major problem on the Balkan Peninsula (2–5).

    The first Bulgarian F. tularensis strain, isolated in 1962 from a muskrat (Ondatra zibethica) found in the lake of Srebarna reserve near the Danube River, was designated Srebarna19 (6). The first 4 tularemia cases in Bulgaria were reported in 1963 (6,7) after a small epidemic involving mostly employees in the Srebarna reserve. After 35 years of tularemia surveillance with no cases reported, a focal epidemic was detected near the end of 1997 (2,8). New cases appeared, and strains were isolated and characterized. A total of 285 cases of tularemia were reported and registered at the Bulgarian Ministry of Health in the period 1997–2004 and the first quarter of 2005. The outbreak areas in 1962 and 1997–2005 in Bulgaria are shown on Figure 1. The first case of tularemia was reported in November 1997 in a patient from a small town in the Slivnitsa region. From 1998 to 2000, 171 cases were reported (8). The outbreak seemed to abate during 2001 and 2002, when only 16 cases were documented. The incidence increased again in 2003 when 76 new cases were reported. An area ≈4,000 km2 near the western border with Serbia and Montenegro was the epidemic focus of the outbreak.

    All the patients exhibited the typical clinical picture of oropharyngeal, oculoglandular, or ulceroglandular tularemia. Four (1.4%) of the 285 patients had the oculoglandular form, 6 (2.1%) had the ulceroglandular form, and 275 (96.5%) had the oropharyngeal form. No deaths, complications, or relapses were observed.

    Except for 1 seronegative patient, tularemia cases were diagnosed according to the confirmed case definition of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (9). Clinically relevant information was gathered by interviews, referral to hospitals, and questionnaires sent to general practitioners in the region and submitted to the reference centers for epidemiologic analysis. Three serum samples (acute phase, convalescent phrase, and l collected 3 months ± 15 days after the end of therapy) were collected from all patients (Appendix Table). All samples were tested with hemagglutination and tube-agglutination assays (BulBio-NCIPD, Sofia, Bulgaria) for anti-Francisella antibodies.

    Fine needle biopsy specimens from enlarged lymph nodes were processed from 20 patients. Half of the volume from each specimen was cultured on modified Thayer-Martin agar (10), and the other half was processed for polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Water samples, collected from 41 wells, were also cultured through passage in guinea pigs (Appendix). Ten strains were isolated, 4 from patients, 4 from water, 1 from a hare, and 1 from a tick (Appendix). One of the human isolates (isolate Las) was from a seronegative patient. Identification of the strains was performed according to their microbiologic and antigenic properties by using standard methods (10). Direct immunofluorescence assay (IFA) with fluorescein isothiocyanate–conjugated anti-Francisella serum (BulBio-NCIPD) was used to detect F. tularensis antigens. DNA from biopsy specimens and strains was subjected to PCR with tul4 and RD1 primers (11). All investigated biopsy specimens and strains were PCR and IFA positive.

    16S-PCR restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLP) and amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) methods were used for molecular typing. For 16S-PCR RFLP, the genomic DNA was amplified by 16S rRNA universal primers (12). The 948-bp PCR product was digested with MboI, RsaI, and HaeIII enzymes. All strains exhibited a characteristic F. tularensis fingerprinting pattern, and no variations were found. For AFLP, DNA was digested with HindIII and MboI enzymes, adaptors were ligated, and selective PCR was carried out with Hind+0 and Mbo+C primers. Pearson correlation and unweighted pair group method with arithmetic averages (UPGMA) algorithms were applied for generating dendrogram . Three of the water isolates showed 100% similarity, and only 1 (Aqua D) was included in the dendrogram . A set of DNA samples from 27 F. tularensis strains originating from Asia, Europe, America, and Bulgaria were also typed. The AFLP method clearly discriminated the representatives of different phylogenetic F. tularensis groups. Although the 27 AFLP patterns show little variability (<25%, Figure 2), distinctive clusters are seen. All of the subspecies holarctica cluster away from the subspecies tularensis. The fingerprinting pattern of a strain Srebarna19, isolated in 1962 during an outbreak near the Lake of Srebarna, shows high similarity with fingerprints of strains isolated in Europe (e.g., the 335–64, Italy 1964, Figure 2). The dendrogram clearly shows divergence between the 1962 Srebarna19 strain and the organisms associated with the current outbreak. The human, water, and animal isolates from the current outbreak have ≈95% similarity. The human isolates are closely related to isolates recovered from well water but are more distantly related to isolates from the hare and tick. The AFLP data of isolates from the current outbreak support the hypothesis of a new genotype emerging in Bulgaria. AFLP also shows the emerging isolates to be genetically distinct from the European, Asian, and American isolates evaluated in this study.

    Several publications describe outbreaks in the Balkan Peninsula with healthcare importance (3–5). Ten F. tularensis strains were isolated in Turkey (3). However, they were not genetically characterized. No isolation was attempted during the Kosovo outbreak in 1999 (5).

    The origin of the 10 strains from the current outbreak is controversial, but they are clearly distinct from the other worldwide isolates included in our study. The new outbreak may be a result of the agricultural reorganizations in Bulgaria in 1990s. These changes affected the way in which the arable soil was ploughed, leaving rodent holes intact. As a result, the populations of rodents, considered the main reservoir of the infection, increased substantially (13).

    Francisella organisms can survive in water for prolonged periods, probably by interaction with protozoa (14). The isolation of bacteria from 4 private wells in the affected area points to ingestion of contaminated food or drinking water as the probable route of infection. This finding is further supported by the observation that most of the cases represent the oropharyngeal form. Rodents (or their excrement) could be the source for water contamination, but this hypothesis is not confirmable because of the lack of later rodent isolates for comparison.

    The organism might have been introduced by means of rodents and hares through the border with Serbia and Montenegro. Agricultural practices are alike in the neighboring countries, and a similar boom in the rodent population might also have occurred there. Such a migration is bidirectional, but a future collaborative study with colleagues from Serbia and Macedonia, where tularemia is also problematic, is necessary to answer this question. Typing isolates originating from different Balkan countries will show the genetic relatedness and biodiversity among resident F. tularensis populations.

    The cases reported in 2004 and 2005 suggest that the outbreak is still in progress. These are the first data for genetic identification and typing of isolates from the Balkan region, and they show a new genotype of F. tularensis emerging as a cause of human disease in Bulgaria.

    Dr Kantardjiev is professor of medicine, microbiology, and epidemiology at the National Center of Infectious and Parasitic Diseases, Sofia, Bulgaria. His research interests are in the field of clinical microbiology, high-risk infections, and management of immunocompromised patients.

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