WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – Detailed genetic tests confirm that the cholera strain that has killed more than 2,000 people in Haiti came from south Asia and most closely resembles a strain circulating in Bangladesh, U.S. researchers reported yesterday.
While they cannot trace who or what precisely carried the cholera to Haiti, the team at Harvard Medical School and Pacific Biosciences of California Inc say their findings show extra measures may be needed to help prevent the spread of cholera from one disaster area to another — a contentious issue because many Haitians have blamed the outbreak on Nepalese troops sent to help them as part of a United Nations mission.
Aid workers from more than 10,000 organizations all over the world have poured into Haiti to help after a devastating January earthquake, which leveled much of the capital and killed 250,000 people.
Writing in the New England Journal of Medicine, Harvard’s Dr. John Mekalanos and colleagues said they also confirmed that Haiti’s cholera strain carries a mutation associated with causing more severe disease.
“Our genome data puts the Haiti strain in the group that is the worst of the worst,” Mekalanos said. “In the future when people go to work in disaster zones … they should be screened or just presumptively given a dose of antibiotics or a vaccine so that they will not transfer cholera,” Dr. Matthew Waldor of Harvard and Brigham and Women’s Hospital added in a telephone interview.
Haiti’s health ministry reports more than 93,000 people have been sickened by cholera since it broke out in Haiti in October. Haiti had not had a case of cholera in a century, but the ongoing devastation from January’s giant earthquake made conditions perfect for its spread.
Cholera is caused by a bacteria called Vibrio cholerae, which thrives in water. It is spread when infected fecal matter gets into unchlorinated water, seafood such as shellfish or other food.
In early November the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said genetic fingerprinting showed Haiti’s cholera strain was part of a 49-year-old global pandemic that began in Indonesia and likely was brought to the Caribbean country in a single instance.
The CDC said it was possible the strain could circulate for years in Haiti and the best options were to try to prevent deaths. Cholera is usually easily treated with rehydration fluids and, in certain severe cases, antibiotics.
But cholera can in rare instances kill patients within hours by causing severe diarrhea and vomiting.
When they got some cholera samples from Haiti in early November, the Harvard team contacted Eric Schadt at Pacific Biosciences, which makes a DNA sequencing machine. They used this $695,000 sequencer to analyze the Haitian cholera’s DNA sequence and compared it to strains from elsewhere.
“We definitely linked it to the recent outbreak strains in Bangladesh,” Schadt said in a telephone interview. But it is not identical, Schadt added, which raises the possibility that the virus may have traveled via elsewhere, perhaps West Africa.