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. 2025 Jul;30(27):2500116.
doi: 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2025.30.27.2500116.

Autochthonous outbreak of respiratory diphtheria caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae, Germany, September 2024

Affiliations

Autochthonous outbreak of respiratory diphtheria caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae, Germany, September 2024

Anja Berger et al. Euro Surveill. 2025 Jul.

Abstract

In September 2024, a school-aged child (P1), unvaccinated against diphtheria, was hospitalised with severe respiratory diphtheria caused by toxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae. P1 subsequently died from the disease. The child's mother (P2) had pharyngitis 9 days before the onset of symptoms of P1 and subsequently tested positive for C. diphtheriae. In multilocus sequence typing (MLST), the C. diphtheriae isolates from P1 and P2 were of sequence type (ST) 574. In core genome (cg)MLST, they were clonal, suggesting recent human-to-human transmission. This indicates the first autochthonous respiratory diphtheria outbreak by toxigenic C. diphtheriae in Germany since 1984 with epidemiologically- and molecularly-confirmed transmission. Furthermore, the isolates were close to isolates from patients with cutaneous diphtheria among people experiencing homelessness in two major German cities in 2023 and 2024, and to isolates from an outbreak among newly arriving migrants across several European countries, including Germany, detected in 2022. This indicates transmission beyond vulnerable groups. Our findings illustrate the potential of C. diphtheriae spreading further from patients with cutaneous diphtheria and even causing outbreaks of respiratory diphtheria. Given the potentially serious complications of respiratory diphtheria, including death, equitably achieving and maintaining high vaccination coverage among the whole population, especially among vulnerable people is essential.

Keywords: Corynebacterium diphtheriae; Ill-Housed Persons; MLST; NGS; WGS; diphtheria; migrants; outbreak; toxigenic; typing.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest: None declared. The authors alone are responsible for the views expressed in this manuscript and they do not necessarily represent the decisions or policies of the World Health Organization.

Figures

The figure presents a phylogenetic minimum spanning tree based on the cgMLST analysis of 54 ST 574 isolates from Germany. Within this tree, the isolates form a cluster primarily composed of strains from newly arrived migrants associated with the 2022 European outbreak, predominantly arranged around the main node of the cluster and evolving from there. Additionally, two subclusters branch off from the main node, neither of which includes migration-associated isolates. The first subcluster comprises isolates from individuals experiencing homelessness in the Frankfurt am Main area in 2023, along with one isolate from 2024 located at the outermost node of the subcluster. The second subcluster consists of isolates from 2024 from homeless persons in Northern Germany, as well as isolates P1 and P2, which are described in this study, from the same geographic area.
Figure
Minimum spanning tree of core genome multilocus sequence typing analysis of isolates of Corynebacterium diphtheriae, Germany, 2022–2024 (n = 54)

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