Traveler has less severe form of TB, doctors say

DENVER – New tests show the globe-trotting American lawyer who caused an international health scare by traveling with a dangerous form of tuberculosis has a less severe form of the disease than first believed, doctors said Tuesday.

The dramatic announcement from physicians treating Andrew Speaker raised immediate questions about the accuracy of the diagnosis by U.S. government health officials who had ordered Speaker quarantined in May.

But the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stood by its earlier test and its action to isolate Speaker. And both Speaker’s doctor in Denver and an official with the CDC who appeared at a news conference here said the public health response should be the same to both forms of drug-resistant TB.

“The public health actions that CDC took in this case, and are continuing to take, are sound and appropriate,” said the CDC’s Dr. Mitchell Cohen.

For the patient himself, the news that he apparently has a more treatable form of TB means he may avoid surgery and has a much better chance for a cure.

“These new test results are good news for Mr. Speaker. His prognosis has improved,” said Dr. Charles Daley, who is treating Speaker at National Jewish Medical and Research Center. “We now have more effective medications available to fight his disease and may be able to treat him successfully without surgery.”

It was also good news for any airline passenger who might have caught TB from Speaker while on one of his trans-Atlantic flights in May. The new diagnosis means their TB also stands a better chance of being treated, Daley said.

Cohen said the CDC won’t know until late July or August whether anyone may have contracted the disease from the 31-year-old Atlanta lawyer.

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