School of Public Health, Tropical Medicine and Rehabilitative Sciences, James Cook University, Cairns, Queensland, Australia.
PLoS One. 2013 Jul 16;8(7):e68137. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0068137. Print 2013.
From November 2008-May 2009 Cairns Queensland Australia was struck by an explosive epidemic of DENV-3 that exceeded the capacity of highly skilled dengue control team to control it. We describe the environmental, virological and entomological factors associated with this outbreak to better understand the circumstances leading to its occurrence. Patient interviews, serological results and viral sequencing strongly suggest that the imported index case was infected in Kalimantan, Indonesia. A delay in notification of 27 days from importation of the index case until Queensland Health was notified of dengue transmission allowed the virus to amplify and spread unchecked through November 2008. Unseasonably warm weather, with daily mean temperatures exceeding 30 °C, occurred in late November and would have shortened the extrinsic incubation period of the virus and enhanced transmission. Analysis of case movements early in the outbreak indicated that the total incubation period was as low as 9-11 days. This was supported by laboratory vector competence studies that found transmission by Aedes aegypti occurred within 5 days post exposure at 28 °C. Effective vector competence rates calculated from these transmission studies indicate that early transmission contributed to the explosive dengue transmission observed in this outbreak. Collections from BG sentinel traps and double sticky ovitraps showed that large populations of the vector Ae. aegypti occurred in the transmission areas from November - December 2008. Finally, the seasonal movement of people around the Christmas holiday season enhanced the spread of DENV-3. These results suggest that a strain of DENV-3 with an unusually rapid transmission cycle was able to outpace vector control efforts, especially those reliant upon delayed action control such as lethal ovitraps.
从 2008 年 11 月至 2009 年 5 月,澳大利亚昆士兰州的凯恩斯市爆发了一场由 DENV-3 引起的爆发性疫情,这超出了高度熟练的登革热控制团队的控制能力。我们描述了与这次疫情相关的环境、病毒学和昆虫学因素,以便更好地了解导致其发生的情况。患者访谈、血清学结果和病毒测序强烈表明,输入性的首例病例是在印度尼西亚的加里曼丹感染的。首例病例输入后,昆士兰州卫生部门直到 27 天后才接到通知,这使得病毒得以在 11 月不受控制地扩散。11 月底,异常温暖的天气使日平均气温超过 30°C,这缩短了病毒的外潜伏期,并增强了传播。疫情早期的病例活动分析表明,总潜伏期低至 9-11 天。这得到了实验室媒介效能研究的支持,该研究发现,在 28°C 下,登革热病毒在接触后 5 天内即可通过埃及伊蚊传播。从这些传播研究中计算出的有效媒介效能率表明,早期传播促成了此次疫情中观察到的爆炸性登革热传播。BG 哨兵诱蚊器和双粘诱卵器的采集表明,2008 年 11 月至 12 月,传播地区出现了大量埃及伊蚊。最后,圣诞假期期间人们的季节性流动加剧了 DENV-3 的传播。这些结果表明,一种具有异常快速传播周期的 DENV-3 株能够超越媒介控制措施,尤其是那些依赖延迟行动控制(如致死诱卵器)的措施。