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Featured researches published by Christina Tan.


Pediatrics | 2015

First Use of a Serogroup B Meningococcal Vaccine in the US in Response to a University Outbreak

Lucy A McNamara; Alice M. Shumate; Peter Johnsen; Jessica R. MacNeil; Manisha Patel; Tina R. Bhavsar; Amanda C. Cohn; Jill Dinitz-Sklar; Jonathan Duffy; Janet Finnie; Denise Garon; Robert Hary; Fang Hu; Hajime Kamiya; Hye-Joo Kim; John Kolligian; Janet Neglia; Judith Oakley; Jacqueline Wagner; Kathy Wagner; Xin Wang; Yon Yu; Barbara Montana; Christina Tan; Robin Izzo; Thomas A. Clark

BACKGROUND: In 2013–2014, an outbreak of serogroup B meningococcal disease occurred among persons linked to a New Jersey university (University A). In the absence of a licensed serogroup B meningococcal (MenB) vaccine in the United States, the Food and Drug Administration authorized use of an investigational MenB vaccine to control the outbreak. An investigation of the outbreak and response was undertaken to determine the population at risk and assess vaccination coverage. METHODS: The epidemiologic investigation relied on compilation and review of case and population data, laboratory typing of meningococcal isolates, and unstructured interviews with university staff. Vaccination coverage data were collected during the vaccination campaign held under an expanded-access Investigational New Drug protocol. RESULTS: Between March 25, 2013, and March 10, 2014, 9 cases of serogroup B meningococcal disease occurred in persons linked to University A. Laboratory typing results were identical for all 8 isolates available. Through May 14, 2014, 89.1% coverage with the 2-dose vaccination series was achieved in the target population. From the initiation of MenB vaccination through February 1, 2015, no additional cases of serogroup B meningococcal disease occurred in University A students. However, the ninth case occurred in March 2014 in an unvaccinated close contact of University A students. CONCLUSIONS: No serogroup B meningococcal disease cases occurred in persons who received 1 or more doses of 4CMenB vaccine, suggesting 4CMenB may have protected vaccinated individuals from disease. However, the ninth case demonstrates that carriage of serogroup B Neisseria meningitidis among vaccinated persons was not eliminated.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2002

Epidemiologic investigations of bioterrorism-related anthrax, New Jersey, 2001.

Carolyn M. Greene; Jennita Reefhuis; Christina Tan; Anthony E. Fiore; Susan T. Goldstein; Michael J. Beach; Stephen C. Redd; David Valiante; Gregory A. Burr; James W. Buehler; Robert W. Pinner; Eddy A. Bresnitz; Beth P. Bell

At least four Bacillus anthracis–containing envelopes destined for New York City and Washington, D.C., were processed at the Trenton Processing and Distribution Center (PDC) on September 18 and October 9, 2001. When cutaneous anthrax was confirmed in a Trenton postal worker, the PDC was closed. Four cutaneous and two inhalational anthrax cases were identified. Five patients were hospitalized; none died. Four were PDC employees; the others handled or received mail processed there. Onset dates occurred in two clusters following envelope processing at the PDC. The attack rate among the 170 employees present when the B. anthracis–containing letters were sorted on October 9 was 1.2%. Of 137 PDC environmental samples, 57 (42%) were positive. Five (10%) of 50 local post offices each yielded one positive sample. Cutaneous or inhalational anthrax developed in four postal employees at a facility where B. anthracis–containing letters were processed. Cross-contaminated mail or equipment was the likely source of infection in two other case-patients with cutaneous anthrax.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2007

A Multistate Outbreak of Serratia marcescens Bloodstream Infection Associated with Contaminated Intravenous Magnesium Sulfate from a Compounding Pharmacy

Rebecca Sunenshine; Esther T. Tan; Dawn M. Terashita; Bette Jensen; Marilyn Kacica; Emily E. Sickbert-Bennett; Judith Noble-Wang; Michael J. Palmieri; Dianna J. Bopp; Daniel B. Jernigan; Sophia V. Kazakova; Eddy A. Bresnitz; Christina Tan; L. Clifford McDonald

BACKGROUND In contrast to pharmaceutical manufacturers, compounding pharmacies adhere to different quality-control standards, which may increase the likelihood of undetected outbreaks. In 2005, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention received reports of cases of Serratia marcescens bloodstream infection occurring in patients who underwent cardiac surgical procedures in Los Angeles, California, and in New Jersey. An investigation was initiated to determine whether there was a common underlying cause. METHODS A matched case-control study was conducted in Los Angeles. Case record review and environmental testing were conducted in New Jersey. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention performed a multistate case-finding investigation; isolates were compared using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analysis. RESULTS Nationally distributed magnesium sulfate solution (MgSO(4)) from compounding pharmacy X was the only significant risk factor for S. marcescens bloodstream infection (odds ratio, 6.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.1-38.3) among 6 Los Angeles case patients and 18 control subjects. Five New Jersey case patients received MgSO(4) from a single lot produced by compounding pharmacy X; culture of samples from open and unopened 50-mL bags in this lot yielded S. marcescens. Seven additional case patients from 3 different states were identified. Isolates from all 18 case patients and from samples of MgSO(4) demonstrated indistinguishable pulsed-field gel electrophoresis patterns. Compounding pharmacy X voluntarily recalled the product. Neither the pharmacy nor the US Food and Drug Administration could identify a source of contamination in their investigations of compounding pharmacy X. CONCLUSIONS A multistate outbreak of S. marcescens bloodstream infection was linked to contaminated MgSO(4) distributed nationally by a compounding pharmacy. Health care personnel should take into account the different quality standards and regulation of compounded parenteral medications distributed in large quantities during investigations of outbreaks of bloodstream infection.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2003

A preventable outbreak of pneumococcal pneumonia among unvaccinated nursing home residents in New Jersey during 2001.

Christina Tan; Stanley Ostrawski; Eddy A. Bresnitz

OBJECTIVE To characterize risk factors for invasive pneumococcal infection in a nursing home outbreak. DESIGN Outbreak investigation, case-control study. SETTING A 114-bed nursing home in New Jersey. PARTICIPANTS Case-patients were nursing home residents hospitalized with febrile respiratory illness and radiographic findings consistent with pneumonia, and either sputum specimens positive for diplococci or blood cultures positive for Streptococcus pneumoniae, with illness onset during April 3-24, 2001. Control-patients were selected randomly from remaining residents without respiratory symptoms. METHODS Chart reviews were performed for case-patients and control-patients. Serotyping and susceptibility testing were performed on S. pneumoniae isolates. Long-term-care facilities (LTCFs) were surveyed to assess compliance with a state regulation mandating pneumococcal vaccination of residents 65 years and older. RESULTS Nine case-patients were identified, with a median age of 86 years (range, 78 to 100 years). The median age of control-patients was 86 years (range, 58 to 95 years). No case-patients versus 9 (50%) control-patients received pneumococcal vaccine before the outbreak (OR, 0; CI95, 0-0.7). Recent antibiotic use, pneumonia history, and physical functioning were not associated with illness. Illness attack rate was 16% among all unvaccinated residents versus 0 among vaccinated residents. S. pneumoniae serotype 14, included in pneumococcal vaccine, was isolated from blood cultures of 7 case-patients. Of 361 LTCFs (42%) that replied to the survey, 28 (8%) were not complying with state immunization regulations. CONCLUSIONS This outbreak occurred in an LTCF with low vaccine coverage. Implementing standing order programs, enforcing regulations, documenting vaccinations, and providing education might increase coverage among nursing home residents.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2006

Identical genotype B3 sequences from measles patients in 4 countries, 2005.

Jennifer S. Rota; Luis Lowe; Paul A. Rota; William J. Bellini; Susan B. Redd; Gustavo H. Dayan; Rob van Binnendijk; Susan Hahné; Graham Tipples; Jeannette Macey; Rita Espinoza; Drew Posey; Andrew Plummer; John Bateman; José Gudiño; Edith Cruz-Ramírez; Irma López-Martínez; Luis Anaya-Lopez; Teneg Holy Akwar; Scott Giffin; Verónica Carrión; Ana Maria Bispo de Filippis; Andrea Vicari; Christina Tan; Bruce Wolf; Katherine Wytovich; Peter Borus; Francis Mbugua; Paul M. Chege; Janeth Kombich

Surveillance of measles virus detected an epidemiologic link between a refugee from Kenya and a Dutch tourist in New Jersey, USA. Identical genotype B3 sequences from patients with contemporaneous cases in the United States, Canada, and Mexico in November and December 2005 indicate that Kenya was likely to have been the common source of virus.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2002

Surveillance for Anthrax Cases Associated with Contaminated Letters, New Jersey, Delaware, and Pennsylvania, 2001

Christina Tan; Hardeep S. Sandhu; Dana C. Crawford; Stephen C. Redd; Michael J. Beach; James W. Buehler; Eddy A. Bresnitz; Robert W. Pinner; Beth P. Bell

In October 2001, two inhalational anthrax and four cutaneous anthrax cases, resulting from the processing of Bacillus anthracis–containing envelopes at a New Jersey mail facility, were identified. Subsequently, we initiated stimulated passive hospital-based and enhanced passive surveillance for anthrax-compatible syndromes. From October 24 to December 17, 2001, hospitals reported 240,160 visits and 7,109 intensive-care unit admissions in the surveillance area (population 6.7 million persons). Following a change to reporting criteria on November 8, the average of possible inhalational anthrax reports decreased 83% from 18 to 3 per day; the proportion of reports requiring follow-up increased from 37% (105/286) to 41% (47/116). Clinical follow-up was conducted on 214 of 464 possible inhalational anthrax patients and 98 possible cutaneous anthrax patients; 49 had additional laboratory testing. No additional cases were identified. To verify the limited scope of the outbreak, surveillance was essential, though labor-intensive. The flexibility of the system allowed interim evaluation, thus improving surveillance efficiency.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2007

Clostridium difficile-associated disease in New Jersey hospitals, 2000-2004.

Esther T. Tan; Corwin Robertson; Shereen Brynildsen; Eddy A. Bresnitz; Christina Tan; Clifford McDonald

Recent emergence of a virulent strain of Clostridium difficile demonstrates the importance of tracking C. difficile incidence locally. Our survey of New Jersey hospitals documented increases in the rates of C. difficile disease (by 2-fold), C. difficile–associated complications (by 7-fold), and C. difficile outbreaks (by 12-fold) during 2000–2004.


American Journal of Infection Control | 2011

Hepatitis B outbreak associated with a hematology-oncology office practice in New Jersey, 2009

Rebecca Greeley; Shereen Semple; Nicola D. Thompson; Patricia High; Ellen Rudowski; Elizabeth F. Handschur; Guoliang Xia; Lilia Ganova-Raeva; Jennifer Crawford; Corwin Robertson; Christina Tan; Barbara Montana

BACKGROUND Transmission of bloodborne pathogens due to breaches in infection control is becoming increasingly recognized as greater emphasis is placed on reducing health care-associated infections. Two women, aged 60 and 77 years, were diagnosed with acute hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection; both received chemotherapy at the same physicians office. Due to suspicion of health care-associated HBV transmission, a multidisciplinary team initiated an investigation of the hematology-oncology office practice. METHODS We performed an onsite inspection and environmental assessment, staff interviews, records review, and observation of staff practices. Patients who visited the office practice between January 1, 2006 and March 3, 2009 were advised to seek testing for bloodborne pathogens. Patients and medical providers were interviewed. Specimens from HBV-infected patients were sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for HBV DNA testing and phylogenic analysis. RESULTS Multiple breaches in infection control were identified, including deficient policies and procedures, improper hand hygiene, medication preparation in a blood processing area, common-use saline bags, and reuse of single-dose vials. The office practice was closed, and the physicians license was suspended. Out of 2,700 patients notified, test results were available for 1,394 (51.6%). Twenty-nine outbreak-associated HBV cases were identified. Specimens from 11 case-patients demonstrated 99.9%-100% nucleotide identity on phylogenetic analysis. CONCLUSION Systematic breaches in infection control led to ongoing transmission of HBV infection among patients undergoing invasive procedures at the office practice. This investigation underscores the need for improved regulatory oversight of outpatient health care settings, improved infection control and injection safety education for health care providers, and the development of mechanisms for ongoing communication and cooperation among public health agencies.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2004

SARS and Pregnancy: A Case Report

Corwin Robertson; Sara A. Lowther; Thomas Birch; Christina Tan; Faye Sorhage; Lauren J. Stockman; L. Clifford McDonald; Jairam R. Lingappa; Eddy A. Bresnitz

We report a laboratory-confirmed case of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in a pregnant woman. Although the patient had respiratory failure, a healthy infant was subsequently delivered, and the mother is now well. There was no evidence of viral shedding at delivery. Antibodies to SARS virus were detected in cord blood and breast milk.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2012

Nocardia cyriacigeorgica Infections Attributable to Unlicensed Cosmetic Procedures — an Emerging Public Health Problem?

Andria Apostolou; Shanna J. Bolcen; Vaidehi Dave; Nisha Jani; Brent A. Lasker; Christina Tan; Barbara Montana; June M. Brown; Carol A. Genese

We describe an outbreak of Nocardia cyriacigeorgica soft-tissue infections attributable to unlicensed cosmetic injections and the first report using multilocus sequence typing sequence data for determining Nocardia strain relatedness in an outbreak. All 8 cases identified had a common source exposure and required hospitalization, surgical debridement, and prolonged antimicrobial therapy.

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Barbara Montana

New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services

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Corwin Robertson

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Andria Apostolou

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Prathit A. Kulkarni

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Alice M. Shumate

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Esther T. Tan

New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services

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Pauline A. Thomas

United States Department of Health and Human Services

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Shereen Semple

New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services

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