Preterm Twins Born to a Mother with Miliary Tuberculosis: Importance of Early Recognition and Prompt Response in Infection Control to Manage Congenital Tuberculosis Exposure in a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit

Delayed diagnosis of congenital tuberculosis (TB) in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) is a serious problem in terms of infection control. Here, we report our preemptive infection control activities implemented after the diagnosis of miliary TB in a mother of preterm twins (index twins, NB1 an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Japanese Journal of Infectious Diseases 2021/03/31, Vol.74(2), pp.97-101
Hauptverfasser: Ryu, Byung-Han, Baek, Eun-Hwa, Kim, Da-Hye, Kim, Se-Eun, Kim, Hyun-Ju, Cho, Oh-Hyun, Hong, Sun In, Do, Hyun-Jeong, Park, Chan-Hoo
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container_title Japanese Journal of Infectious Diseases
container_volume 74
creator Ryu, Byung-Han
Baek, Eun-Hwa
Kim, Da-Hye
Kim, Se-Eun
Kim, Hyun-Ju
Cho, Oh-Hyun
Hong, Sun In
Do, Hyun-Jeong
Park, Chan-Hoo
description Delayed diagnosis of congenital tuberculosis (TB) in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) is a serious problem in terms of infection control. Here, we report our preemptive infection control activities implemented after the diagnosis of miliary TB in a mother of preterm twins (index twins, NB1 and NB2) in the NICU. In addition, we reviewed previous case reports of congenital TB exposure in the NICU setting. Immediately after diagnosing miliary TB in the mother, the index twins were isolated before their TB diagnosis and received preemptive anti-TB medication; contact investigations were also conducted. Eventually, NB1 was diagnosed with congenital TB at 29 days of age, and NB2 showed no definite evidence of TB. Through contact investigation, 11 of the 16 exposed infants received isoniazid prophylaxis and no positive tuberculin skin test results were obtained after 3 months. One of the 31 exposed healthcare workers showed new interferon-gamma release assay conversion. Moreover, our case showed a much shorter contagious period compared to that in previous reports (8 versus 17–102 days). This suggests that a high index of suspicion and prompt measures can help prevent congenital TB outbreaks and reduce the burden of infection control activities in the NICU.
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subjects Case reports
congenital tuberculosis
Diagnosis
Disease control
Exposure
Infants
infection control
Infections
Intensive care
Interferon
Isoniazid
Medical personnel
Neonates
NICU
Occupational exposure
Preempting
Prophylaxis
Skin tests
Tuberculin
Tuberculosis
Twins
γ-Interferon
title Preterm Twins Born to a Mother with Miliary Tuberculosis: Importance of Early Recognition and Prompt Response in Infection Control to Manage Congenital Tuberculosis Exposure in a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit
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