from Epidemiological Bulletin,
Vol. 24 No. 1, March 2003
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)
Case Definition, Revised 1 May 2003 (WHO)
Objective
To describe the epidemiology of SARS and to monitor the magnitude and the
spread of this disease, in order to provide advice on prevention and control.
Case definitions
Introduction
The surveillance case definitions based on available clinical and epidemiological
data are now being supplemented by a number of laboratory tests and will continue
to be reviewed as tests currently used in research settings become more widely
available as diagnostic tests.
The document Preliminary
clinical description of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome summarizes
what is currently known about the clinical features of SARS. Countries may need
to adapt case definitions depending on their own disease situation. Retrospective
surveillance is not expected.
Clinicians are advised that patients should not have their case
definition category downgraded while awaiting results of laboratory testing
or on the bases of negative results.
Suspect case
1. A person presenting after 1 November 2002 (1) with history
of:
- high fever (>38 °C) AND
- cough or breathing difficulty AND one or more of the following exposures during
the 10 days prior to onset of symptoms:
- close contact (2) with a person who is a suspect or
probable case of SARS;
- history of travel, to an area with recent local transmission of SARS
- residing in an area with recent local transmission of SARS
2. A person with an unexplained acute respiratory illness resulting in death
after 1 November 2002,(1) but on whom no autopsy has been performed
AND one or more of the following exposures during to 10 days prior to onset
of symptoms:
- close contact (2) with a person who is a suspect or
probable case of SARS;
- history of travel to an area with recent local transmission of SARS
- residing in an area with recent local transmission of SARS
Probable case
1. A suspect case with radiographic evidence of infiltrates consistent with
pneumonia or respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) on chest X-ray (CXR).
2. A suspect case of SARS that is positive for SARS coronavirus by one or more
assays. (See Use
of laboratory methods for SARS diagnosis)
3. A suspect case with autopsy findings consistent with the pathology of RDS
without an identifiable cause.
Exclusion criteria
A case should be excluded if an alternative diagnosis can fully explain their
illness.
Reclassification of cases
As SARS is currently a diagnosis of exclusion, the status of a reported
case may change over time. A patient should always be managed as clinically
appropriate, regardless of their case status.
- A case initially classified as suspect or probable, for whom
an alternative diagnosis can fully explain the illness, should be discarded
after carefully considering the possibility of co-infection.
- A suspect case who, after investigation, fulfils the probable case definition
should be reclassified as probable.
- A suspect case with a normal CXR should be treated, as deemed appropriate,
and monitored for 7 days. Those cases in whom recovery is inadequate should
be re-evaluated by CXR.
- Those suspect cases in whom recovery is adequate but whose illness cannot
be fully explained by an alternative diagnosis should remain as suspect.
- A suspect case who dies, on whom no autopsy is conducted, should remain classified
as suspect. However, if this case is identified as being part of
a chain transmission of SARS, the case should be reclassified as probable.
- If an autopsy is conducted and no pathological evidence of RDS is found, the
case should be discarded.
Reporting procedures
- All probable SARS cases should be managed in the same way for the purposes
of infection control and outbreak containment (See "Management
of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)")
- At this time, WHO is maintaining surveillance for clinically apparent cases
only i.e. probable and suspect cases of SARS. (Testing of clinically well contacts
of probable or suspect SARS cases and community based serological surveys are
being conducted as part of epidemiological studies which may ultimately change
our understanding of SARS transmission. However, persons who test SARS CoV positive
in these studies will not be notified as SARS cases to WHO at this time).
- Where laboratory tests are not available or not done, probable SARS cases
as currently defined above should continue to be reported in the agreed format.
- Suspect cases with positive laboratory results will be reclassified as probable
cases for notification purposes only if the testing laboratories use appropriate
quality control procedures.
- No distinction will be made between probable cases with or without a positive
laboratory result and suspect cases with a positive result for the purposes
of global surveillance. WHO will negotiate sentinel surveillance of SARS with
selected partners to collect detailed epidemiological, laboratory and clinical
data.
- Cases that meet the surveillance case definition for SARS should not be discarded
on the basis of negative laboratory tests at this time.
Rationale for retaining the current surveillance case definitions for SARS
The reason for retaining the clinical and epidemiological basis for the
case definitions is that at present there is no validated, widely and consistently
available test for infection with the SARS coronavirus. Antibody tests may not
become positive for three or more weeks after the onset of symptoms. We do not
yet know if all patients will mount an antibody response. Molecular assays must
be performed using appropriate reagents and controls under strictly controlled
conditions, and may not be positive in the early stages of illness using currently
available reagents. We are not yet able to define the optimal specimen to be
tested at any given stage of the illness. This information is accruing as more
tests are being performed on patients with known exposures and/or accompanied
by good clinical and epidemiological information. We hope that in the near future
an accessible and validated diagnostic assay(s) will become available which
can be employed with confidence at a defined, early stage of the illness.
Notes:
(1) The surveillance period begins on 1 November 2002 to capture
cases of atypical pneumonia in China now recognized as SARS. International transmission
of SARS was first reported in March 2003 for cases with onset in February 2003.
(2) Close contact: having cared for , lived with, or
had direct contact with respiratory secretions or body fluids of a suspect or
probable case of SARS.
Source: World Health Organization (WHO)
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Epidemiological Bulletin, Vol. 24 No. 1, March
2003