• J Travel Med · Mar 2022

    Tick-borne encephalitis among US travellers, 2010-20.

    • Susan L Hills, Kelly R Broussard, James C Broyhill, Lalita G Shastry, Caitlin M Cossaboom, Jennifer L White, Kimberly D Machesky, Olga Kosoy, Kyle Girone, John D Klena, Bryon P Backenson, Carolyn V Gould, Leah Lind, Arielle Hieronimus, David N Gaines, Susan J Wong, Mary J Choi, Janeen J Laven, J Erin Staples, and Marc Fischer.
    • Arboviral Diseases Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Fort Collins, CO 80521, USA.
    • J Travel Med. 2022 Mar 21; 29 (2).

    BackgroundTick-borne encephalitis (TBE) is an arboviral disease that is focally endemic in parts of Europe and Asia. TBE cases among US travellers are rare, with previous reports of only six cases among civilian travellers through 2009 and nine military-related cases through 2020. A TBE vaccine was licenced in the USA in August 2021. Understanding TBE epidemiology and risks among US travellers can help with the counselling of travellers going to TBE-endemic areas.MethodsDiagnostic testing for TBE in the USA is typically performed at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) because no commercial testing is available. Diagnostic testing for TBE at CDC since 2010 was reviewed. For individuals with evidence of TBE virus infection, information was gathered on demographics, clinical presentations and risk factors for infection.ResultsFrom 2010-20, six patients with TBE were identified. Cases occurred among both paediatric and adult travellers and all were male. Patients were diagnosed with meningitis (n = 2) or encephalitis (n = 4); none died. Cases had travelled to various countries in Europe or Russia. Three cases reported visiting friends or relatives. Activities reported included hiking, camping, trail running, or working outdoors, and two cases had a recognized tick bite.ConclusionsTBE cases among US travellers are uncommon, with these six cases being the only known TBE cases among civilian travellers during this 11-year period. Nonetheless, given potential disease severity, pre-travel counselling for travellers to TBE-endemic areas should include information on measures to reduce the risk for TBE and other tick-borne diseases, including possible TBE vaccine use if a traveller's itinerary puts them at higher risk for infection. Clinicians should consider the diagnosis of TBE in a patient with a neurologic or febrile illness recently returned from a TBE-endemic country, particularly if a tick bite or possible tick exposure is reported.Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of International Society of Travel Medicine 2021.

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