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Plague Gives Surprises in the Second Decade of the Twenty-First Century.

From 2010 through 2019, the six leading countries by numbers of human plague cases reported to the WHO were, in order from highest to lowest, Madagascar, Congo, Uganda, Peru, Tanzania, and the United States. From these countries, there was a total of 4,547 cases, of whom 786 (17%) died. Top plague events were four outbreaks of primary pneumonic plague in Madagascar that affected 1,936 persons, including index cases, of whom 137 died. One of the outbreaks was caused by a streptomycin-resistant strain of Yersinia pestis. Person-to-person transmission occurred in a taxi, in households with family caregivers, at burial ceremonies and wakes for victims, and at a hospital where cases were treated. Unique clinical presentations in the United States included a dog owner who acquired pneumonic plague from his sick dog, a boy with septicemic plague who developed complications of osteomyelitis and arthritis that required surgery for bone removal and bone grafting, and a prairie dog handler who acquired bubonic plague from a bite by a sick prairie dog. Efficacy of antibiotics in a model of pneumonic plague in African green monkeys for use in bioterrorism revealed the most effective drugs to be gentamicin, ciprofloxacin, and levofloxacin. A recombinant vaccine containing Fraction 1 antigen and V antigen of Y. pestis designed for first responders during a bioterrorism attack and military personnel was tested for safety and immunogenicity but was not licensed for use by the end of the decade.

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