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Volume 28, Number 8—August 2022
Dispatch

Child Melioidosis Deaths Caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei–Contaminated Borehole Water, Vietnam, 2019

Author affiliations: Vietnam National University, Hanoi, Vietnam (Q.T.L. Tran, L.N.H. Bui, H.T.V. Bui, T.T. Trinh); Vietnam National Children’s Hospital, Hanoi (P.H. Phan, N.T.B. Hoang, D.M. Tran)

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Abstract

Within 8 months, 3 children from 1 family in northern Vietnam died from melioidosis. Burkholderia pseudomallei of the same sequence type, 541, was isolated from clinical samples, borehole water, and garden and rice field soil. Boreholes should be properly constructed and maintained to avoid B. pseudomallei contamination.

The gram-negative soil-dwelling saprophytic bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei causes melioidosis, a fatal disease highly endemic to Southeast Asia and northern Australia (1). Humans can be infected with B. pseudomallei via inoculation, inhalation, and ingestion. Rice farmers are at high risk for infection because of their frequent exposure to soil and water, but newborns, children, and older persons also are at risk (2,3). We report 3 melioidosis deaths among children in northern Vietnam.

The Study

In November 2019, the Preventive Health Center of Soc Son district in Vietnam reported the deaths of 3 children from 1 family. The first child, a 7-year-old girl, had a high fever and abdominal pain on April 6, 2019. Two days later, she was admitted to a local hospital; after 1 day, she was transferred to St. Paul Hospital in Hanoi, where septic shock was diagnosed. She died on April 9, shortly after admission, before any diagnostic tests were performed.

On October 27, 2019, the second child, a 5-year-old boy, had a high fever and abdominal pain around the umbilicus. He was admitted to Vietnam National Children’s Hospital in Hanoi on October 28 with diagnosed septic shock. Abdominal and chest radiographs and abdominal ultrasound results were unremarkable. His blood culture grew B. pseudomallei, and he died on October 31.

The third child, a 13-month-old boy, had a high fever and poor appetite on November 10, 2019. According to his grandparents, he had black stool, like his sister and brother. He was admitted to Vietnam National Children’s Hospital; chest radiography results were unremarkable, but B. pseudomallei was cultured from his blood sample. He died on November 16.

We retrieved laboratory findings from all hospitals to which these children were admitted. Results showed leukopenia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and high procalcitonin and C-reactive protein in all children’s blood. Liver dysfunction was diagnosed in all 3 children, but kidney dysfunction was recognized only in the 2 older children. We detected no identifiable risk factors (Table 1).

Figure 1

Environmental sampling sites in an investigation of 3 child deaths from melioidosis caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei–contaminated borehole water, Vietnam, 2019. The satellite map was created using QGIS software version 3.22.1 (https://www.qgis.org). Red outline indicates the family property where the children lived; red circle is borehole A from which B. pseudomallei was isolated. Yellow outlines are rice fields from which soil samples were collected; red stars indicate rice fields that tested positive for B. pseudomallei. Yellow circles indicate neighbors’ boreholes and yellow squares indicate neighbors’ ponds from which water samples were collected. Inset map shows Vietnam; red square indicates sampling area.

Figure 1. Environmental sampling sites in an investigation of 3 child deaths from melioidosis caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei–contaminated borehole water, Vietnam, 2019. The satellite map was created using QGIS software...

To trace the source of infection, on November 17, 2019, we visited the family home in the midland region of northern Vietnam (Figure 1). During our active surveillance for melioidosis cases admitted to provincial and tertiary hospitals surrounding Hanoi (4), no previous cases had been reported from this area.

We interviewed the parents and grandparents using epidemiologic questions about all the children’s daily activities inside and outside the house. The family used water supplied from 3 boreholes: 1 for bathing (borehole A), 1 for livestock (borehole B), and 1 for human consumption (borehole C). During our first environmental investigation, we collected samples of front garden soil (n = 7), borehole water (n = 9), and boiled drinking water (n = 1). We performed qualitative culture for B. pseudomallei, and all 3 water samples collected from borehole A tested positive (Appendix).

Figure 2

Borehole involved in 3 child melioidosis deaths caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei–contaminated borehole water, Vietnam, 2019. A) View of area around borehole. The bore cap is ≈80 cm below the soil surface inside the masonry area. Red arrow indicates cracks in the masonry construction that might enable rainwater and soil particles to drain into the borehole area. B) View from above the borehole. Red arrow indicates the unsealed, opened gap around the borehole, which likely enabled rainwater and soil particles to drain into the groundwater during the rainy season.

Figure 2. Borehole involved in 3 child melioidosis deaths caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei–contaminated borehole water, Vietnam, 2019. A) View of area around borehole. The bore cap is ≈80 cm below...

We revisited the home on November 23, 2019, and asked the family about the history of borehole A. In brief, the borehole was drilled in 2010. In 2015, the family reconstructed the back garden and added a new soil layer, resulting in the bore cap being ≈80 cm below the soil surface (Figure 2, panel A). At the end of 2018, the foot valve in the suction pipe of the dynamic electric pump was damaged, and the bore cap was not sealed after the damage was repaired (Figure 2, panel B). We suspected rainwater and surface soil particles contaminated with B. pseudomallei drained into the groundwater via the opened borehole. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a second round of environmental sampling, focusing on borehole A and the nearby surface soil. We collected 26 borehole water and 46 garden soil samples. Within a 1-km radius of the home, we also collected 39 water samples from other boreholes, 30 surface water samples from 10 ponds, and 40 soil samples from 8 rice fields (Figure 1; Appendix).

We found 26 (100%) water samples collected from borehole A and 27 (58.7%) garden soil samples from 8 (80%) sampling points near the borehole were B. pseudomallei–positive by qualitative culture. These findings supported our hypothesis that B. pseudomallei from surface soil might have contaminated the groundwater through the unsealed bore cap during the rainy season, which starts in April and coincided with the first child’s illness and death. Another 5 (12.5%) soil samples from 2 (25%) rice fields also tested B. pseudomallei–positive. Quantitative culture showed that the median B. pseudomallei count was 406 CFU/g (range 12–746 CFU/g) in soil (Appendix). Of 26 water samples collected from borehole A, 2 (7.7%) grew B. pseudomallei on the initial agar plates and had a median B. pseudomallei count of 2 CFU/mL (Table 2).

We selected 20 B. pseudomallei isolates for multilocus sequence typing (MLST) (5): 7 from borehole A, 6 from back garden soil, 5 from rice field soil, and 2 from blood samples from cases 2 and 3. MLST showed an identical sequence type (ST), 541, among all samples (Table 2).

Conclusions

B. pseudomallei is ubiquitously distributed in soil and surface water throughout the tropics, including in Asia, the Pacific Islands, sub-Saharan Africa, and Latin America, where boreholes are the most common water supply in the rural areas (1,6,7). In addition to other waterborne infections (7), untreated water supplies have been implicated in previous human B. pseudomallei infections (810). B. pseudomallei also was isolated from the compacted earth floor under the bathing tub of a woman who died from septicemic melioidosis in Brazil (11).

Studies in Australia and Thailand detected diverse STs among B. pseudomallei isolates from an unchlorinated bore water site and a single soil sample (12,13), but our analysis revealed a single ST in the borehole, nearby garden, and surrounding rice fields. Because all 3 infections occurred in children, we believe B. pseudomallei transmission likely occurred through ingestion of contaminated water during bathing, especially considering that the 13-month-old boy was not in contact with garden or rice field soil. Ingestion also could explain the gastrointestinal symptoms the children exhibited.

B. pseudomallei ST541 has been reported from human melioidosis cases in northern Vietnam (3) and has only been described from southeast Asia thus far. During previous surveillance (4), we found other ST541 isolates in clinical and environmental samples from north and north-central Vietnam. An ST541 isolate available in a public MLST database (https://pubmlst.org/organisms/burkholderia-pseudomallei; accessed 2021 Dec 8) was from a human case in Hainan, China, which is close to the area of Vietnam where these 3 melioidosis deaths occurred. From our clinical data retrieval (3,4), 5 of 8 patients infected with B. pseudomallei ST541 died, which could mean ST541 is more virulent than other STs, but further data are needed.

From the epidemiologic investigation and field study at the family home, we became aware of the construction and maintenance of the borehole, which had an unsealed cap and an open borehole below the soil surface. The unsealed borehole probably enabled B. pseudomallei from surface soil to contaminate groundwater during rainfall. Other studies have reported higher rates of gastrointestinal pathogens in water from boreholes with unsealed annuli (14,15). Therefore, persons using boreholes in countries where melioidosis is endemic should ensure proper construction and maintenance to avoid contamination with B. pseudomallei and other pathogens from surface soil.

Mrs. Tran is a PhD candidate at the Laboratory for Microbial Pathogens, VNU–Institute of Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vietnam National University, Hanoi, Vietnam. Her research interests include melioidosis diagnosis and detection of B. pseudomallei from environmental samples.

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Acknowledgments

We express our deepest condolences to the family members and sincerely thank them for providing information during the investigation.

This work was supported by Vietnam National University, Hanoi, Vietnam (grant no. QG.21.57). Q.T.L.T. received a PhD scholarship from the Vingroup Innovation Foundation (award no. 2020.TS.33).

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References

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Cite This Article

DOI: 10.3201/eid2808.220113

Original Publication Date: June 13, 2022

Table of Contents – Volume 28, Number 8—August 2022

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Trung T. Trinh, Laboratory for Microbial Pathogens, VNU–Institute of Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vietnam National University, 144 Xuan Thuy, Cau Giay, Hanoi, Vietnam

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Page created: June 13, 2022
Page updated: July 20, 2022
Page reviewed: July 20, 2022
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
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