A case of coronavirus was confirmed in San Diego on Monday — as the death toll in China topped 1,000, officials said.

The patient in San Diego was evacuated last week on a flight from the Chinese city of Wuhan, where the deadly virus originated in late December, Channel 10 News reported.

The individual was taken to US San Diego Medical Center in good condition and is in isolation, health officials said.

Federal officials chartered a flight to evacuate about 230 Americans from the city, which was quarantined late last month in an effort to curb the outbreak.

The plane landed in California on Wednesday.

All those aboard were quarantined at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar for a mandatory 14-day hold.

Nine evacuees were further evaluated at local hospitals and six were cleared and taken back to the station. Test results are pending for two others.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention didn’t immediately comment on the new case, which would be the 13th in the US after a patient was confirmed in Wisconsin on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, Chinese officials on Tuesday said the death toll had reached 1,016, up 108 from the day before.

It was also the first time there were more than 100 deaths in one day due to the pandemic.

The number of cases also grew to over 42,638.