Early detection of and treatment for chronic Q fever might prevent potentially life-threatening complications. We performed a chronic Q fever screening program in general practitioner practices in the Netherlands 10 years after a large Q fever outbreak. Thirteen general practitioner practices located in outbreak areas selected 3,419 patients who had specific underlying medical conditions, of whom 1,642 (48%) participated. Immunofluorescence assay of serum showed that 289 (18%) of 1,642 participants had a previous Coxiella burnetii infection (IgG II titer >1:64), and 9 patients were suspected of having chronic Q fever (IgG I y titer >1:512). After medical evaluation, 4 of those patients received a chronic Q fever diagnosis. The cost of screening was higher than estimated earlier, but the program was still cost-effective in certain high risk groups. Years after a large Q fever outbreak, targeted screening still detected patients with chronic Q fever and is estimated to be cost-effective.
CITATION STYLE
Reukers, D. F. M., De Boer, P. T., Loohuis, A. O., Wever, P. C., Bleeker-Rovers, C. P., Van Gageldonk-Lafeber, A. B., … Timen, A. (2022). Targeted Screening for Chronic Q Fever, the Netherlands. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 28(7), 1403–1409. https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2807.212273
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