Imported Falciparum Malaria in Europe: Sentinel Surveillance Data from the European Network on Surveillance of Imported Infectious Diseases

Tomáš Jelı́nek(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Claudia Schulte, R.H. Behrens, Martin P. Grobusch(Office of Infectious Diseases), J.P. Couláud(Institut de Médecine et d'Epidémiologie Africaines), Zeno Bisoffi(Ospedale Sacro Cuore Don Calabria), Alberto Matteelli(University of Brescia), Jan Clerinx(Instituut voor Tropische Geneeskunde), M Corachán, S. Puente(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), Ida Gjørup(University of Copenhagen), Gundel Harms(Humboldt State University), Herwig Kollaritsch(University of Vienna), A Kotłowski(Gdynia Maritime University), A. Bjorkmann(Karolinska Institutet), J Delmont, Jürgen Knobloch(University of Tübingen), Louise Nielsen(Hvidovre Hospital), Juan Cuadros‐González(Hospital Universitario Príncipe de Asturias), Christoph Hatz(Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute), Jiřı́ Beran, M Schmid(North Tyneside General Hospital), Marco H. Schulze(Klinikum St. Georg), Rogelio López‐Vélez, K Fleischer(Medical Mission Institute), Annette Kapaun(Heidelberg University), Paul McWhinney(Bradford Royal Infirmary), P. Kern(Universität Ulm), J. Atougia(Universidade Nova de Lisboa), Graham Fry, Saraiva da Cunha(Hospitais da Universidade de Coimbra), Gerhard Boecken(Schifffahrtmedizinisches Institut der Marine), for the European Network on Surveillance of Imported Infectious Diseases (TropNetEurop)
Clinical Infectious Diseases
March 1, 2002
Cited by 251Open Access
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Abstract

Malaria continues to have a high morbidity rate associated among European travelers. Thorough recording of epidemiological and clinical aspects of imported malaria has been helpful in the detection of new outbreaks and areas of developing drug resistance. Sentinel surveillance of data collected prospectively since 1999 has begun within TropNetEurop, a European network focusing on imported infectious diseases. TropNetEurop appears to cover approximately 10% of all patients with malaria seen in Europe. Reports of 1659 immigrants and European patients with Plasmodium falciparum malaria were analyzed for epidemiological information and data on clinical features. Regional data were quite diverse, reflecting local patterns of immigration and international travel. By far, the most infections were imported from West Africa. Europeans had more clinical complications; consequently, all deaths occurred in this group. Compared with European standards, the mortality rate was low (0.6% in Europeans). Data from TropNetEurop member sites can contribute to our understanding of the epidemiological and clinical findings regarding imported falciparum malaria.


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