Volume 28, Number 4—April 2022
Research Letter
Tularemia Transmission to Humans, the Netherlands, 2011–2021
Table
Life cycle | Transmission mode | Probable or confirmed mode | Year | Occupational exposure | Clinical manifestation | Basal clade | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Terrestrial | Aerosols from contaminated vegetation |
Probable | 2016 | Yes | Pneumonic | B.6-B.11 | (4) |
Probable | 2017 | Yes | Pneumonic | ND | |||
Contact with (or consumption of) infected hare carcass |
Probable | 2014 | No | Ulceroglandular | ND | (3) | |
Probable | 2014 | No | Ulceroglandular | ND | (3) | ||
Confirmed | 2014 | No | Glandular | B.12-B.20 | |||
Confirmed | 2016 | No | Ulceroglandular | ND | |||
Probable | 2016 | No | Ulceroglandular | B.6-B.11 | |||
Probable | 2017 | No | Unclear (fatigue) | ND | |||
Probable | 2019 | No | Oculoglandular and oropharyngeal | ND | |||
Probable | 2021 | No | Glandular | ND | |||
Mouse bite | Probable | 2021 | No | Ulceroglandular | B.6-B.11 | ||
Tick bite | Probable | 2019 | No | Glandular | ND | ||
Probable | 2020 | No | Glandular | B.12-B.33 | |||
Insect bite while on land | Probable | 2013 | No | Ulceroglandular | B.6-B.11 | ||
Probable† | 2016 | No | Glandular | B.12-B.33 | |||
Probable |
2021 |
Yes |
Ulceroglandular |
B.6-B.11 |
|||
Aquatic | Contact with contaminated water/mud |
Probable† | 2016 | No | Glandular | ND | (5) |
Probable | 2016 | Yes | Ulceroglandular | ND | |||
Probable | 2016 | No | Glandular | ND | |||
Probable | 2016 | No | Ulceroglandular | ND | |||
Contact with contaminated water or insect bite |
Probable† | 2015 | No | Ulceroglandular | B.6-B.10 | ||
Probable | 2021 | No | Oculoglandular and ulceroglandular | ND | |||
Insect bite while on water |
Probable |
2011 |
No |
Ulceroglandular |
B.6-B.11 |
(2) |
|
Unclear | Unclear | Probable | 2016 | No | Glandular | ND | |
Probable | 2018 | No | Ulceroglandular | B.12 | |||
Probable | 2018 | No | Glandular | B.6 |
*Data are for 26 infections caused by Francisella tularensis subspecies holarctica. ND, not determined. †Water, sampled within 6 weeks from waterbodies in the area where infection was assumed to have occurred, tested positive for F. tularensis subsp. holarctica by quantitative PCR, indicating presence of the bacterium in the local environment around the time of infection and highlighting the interconnection between lifecycles (7).
References
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916985 . DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar - van de Wetering D, Oliveira dos Santos C, Wagelaar M, de Kleuver M, Koene MG, Roest HI, et al. A cluster of tularaemia after contact with a dead hare in the Netherlands. Neth J Med. 2015;73:481–2.PubMedGoogle Scholar
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- Appelt S, Köppen K, Radonić A, Drechsel O, Jacob D, Grunow R, et al. Genetic diversity and spatial segregation of Francisella tularensis subspecies holarctica in Germany. Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2019;9:376. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
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1These first authors contributed equally to this article.
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