心胸外科患者急性乙型肝炎两个相关聚集性的经验教训。

J Heptonstall
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1992年和1993年对英国两家医院心胸外科病人的两组急性乙型肝炎进行了调查。传染源是一名乙型肝炎病毒(HBV)的外科医生携带者,其血清中含有乙型肝炎e抗原(HBeAg),在对第一个聚集性病例的调查中未发现,尽管对所有对受感染患者进行易暴露手术的卫生保健工作者进行了检测。在流行病学和病毒学上与这两个聚集性病例有关联的外科医生的HBV状况,仅在第二次调查时才被发现,当时直接从外科医生和其他相关卫生保健工作者那里获得了标本。法医检验显示,外科医生在第一次调查期间提供的血液样本与在第二次调查期间直接从外科医生那里获得的血液样本不同;后来才清楚,在第一次调查中,外科医生提供了一个可能是乙型肝炎表面抗原(HBsAg)阴性的人的标本。在确认外科医生的传染性之前的15个月内,外科医生曾对其进行暴露倾向手术的患者从当地记录中确定,而那些已知未死亡或居住在英国境外的患者随后在暴露后至少6个月进行乙型肝炎感染标志物检测。323名暴露患者中的310名(95%)接受了检测;20例(6%)被归类为手术相关获得性乙型肝炎感染,其中3例发生持续性感染。暴露和测试的患者中有239人接受了冠状动脉置换术,有或没有心脏瓣膜置换术。75名外科医生担任第一助理(通常包括进行胸骨切开术)的患者中有13名(17%)被感染,而159名被感染的外科医生担任“静脉采集者”,不太可能进行胸骨切开术的患者中有5名(3%)被感染(p = 0.00029)。我们得出的结论是,患者可能在六分之一的心胸外科手术过程中至少接触到一名操作员的血液,这些手术具有高暴露风险。我们建议,在调查可能在手术中获得的急性乙型肝炎感染病例时,卫生保健工作者的血液标本应通过直接观察取样获得。
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Lessons from two linked clusters of acute hepatitis B in cardiothoracic surgery patients.

Two clusters of acute hepatitis B in cardiothoracic surgery patients of two hospitals in the United Kingdom were investigated in 1992 and 1993. The source, a surgeon carrier of hepatitis B virus (HBV) whose serum contained hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg), was not identified during investigation of the first cluster, although all the health care workers who had performed exposure prone procedures on the infected patients were tested. The HBV status of the surgeon, who was linked epidemiologically and virologically with cases in both clusters, was revealed only during the second investigation, when specimens were obtained directly from the surgeon and the other health care workers involved. Forensic testing showed the blood specimen provided by the surgeon during the first investigation to be distinct from that obtained directly from the surgeon during the second investigation; it later became clear that during the first investigation the surgeon had provided a specimen from a person likely to be hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) negative. Patients on whom the surgeon had performed exposure prone procedures in the 15 months before the surgeon's infectivity was recognised were identified from local records, and those not known to have died or to be resident outside the United Kingdom were subsequently tested for markers of hepatitis B infection at least six months after exposure. In total, 310 of 323 (95%) exposed patients were tested; 20 (6%) were classified as having acquired hepatitis B infection in association with surgery, three of whom developed persistent infection. Two hundred and thirty-nine of the exposed and tested patients had undergone coronary artery replacement surgery with or without heart valve replacement. Thirteen out of 75 (17%) for whom the surgeon had taken the role of first assistant-which usually includes performing sternotomy -became infected, compared with five out of 159 (3%) of those for whom the infected surgeon acted as 'vein harvester' and would have been unlikely to have performed the sternotomy (p = 0.00029). We conclude that patients may be exposed to the blood of at least one operator in as many as one in six cardiothoracic surgery procedures that carry a high exposure risk. We suggest that blood specimens from health care workers should be obtained by directly observed sampling in the investigation of cases of acute hepatitis B infection that may have been acquired during surgery.

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