Bodinayake Champica K, Tillekeratne L Gayani, Nagahawatte Ajith, Devasiri Vasantha, Kodikara Arachichi Wasantha, Strouse John J, Sessions October M, Kurukulasooriya Ruvini, Uehara Anna, Howe Shiqin, Ong Xin Mei, Tan Sharon, Chow Angelia, Tummalapalli Praveen, De Silva Aruna D, Østbye Truls, Woods Christopher W, Gubler Duane J, Reller Megan E
Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ruhuna, Galle, Sri Lanka.
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2016 Oct 6;10(10):e0004995. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0004995. eCollection 2016 Oct.
Dengue is a frequent cause of acute febrile illness with an expanding global distribution. Since the 1960s, dengue in Sri Lanka has been documented primarily along the heavily urbanized western coast with periodic shifting of serotypes. Outbreaks from 2005-2008 were attributed to a new clade of DENV-3 and more recently to a newly introduced genotype of DENV-1. In 2007, we conducted etiologic surveillance of acute febrile illness in the Southern Province and confirmed dengue in only 6.3% of febrile patients, with no cases of DENV-1 identified. To re-evaluate the importance of dengue as an etiology of acute febrile illness in this region, we renewed fever surveillance in the Southern Province to newly identify and characterize dengue.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: A cross-sectional surveillance study was conducted at the largest tertiary care hospital in the Southern Province from 2012-2013. A total of 976 patients hospitalized with acute undifferentiated fever were enrolled, with 64.3% male and 31.4% children. Convalescent blood samples were collected from 877 (89.6%). Dengue virus isolation, dengue RT-PCR, and paired IgG ELISA were performed. Acute dengue was confirmed as the etiology for 388 (39.8%) of 976 hospitalizations, with most cases (291, 75.0%) confirmed virologically and by multiple methods. Among 351 cases of virologically confirmed dengue, 320 (91.2%) were due to DENV-1. Acute dengue was associated with self-reported rural residence, travel, and months having greatest rainfall. Sequencing of selected dengue viruses revealed that sequences were most closely related to those described from China and Southeast Asia, not nearby India.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: We describe the first epidemic of DENV-1 in the Southern Province of Sri Lanka in a population known to be susceptible to this serotype because of prior study. Dengue accounted for 40% of acute febrile illnesses in the current study. The emergence of DENV-1 as the foremost serotype in this densely populated but agrarian population highlights the changing epidemiology of dengue and the need for continued surveillance and prevention.
登革热是急性发热性疾病的常见病因,其全球分布范围正在扩大。自20世纪60年代以来,斯里兰卡的登革热主要记录在高度城市化的西海岸,血清型会周期性变化。2005 - 2008年的疫情归因于DENV - 3的一个新分支,最近则归因于新引入的DENV - 1基因型。2007年,我们在南部省份对急性发热性疾病进行了病因学监测,仅在6.3%的发热患者中确诊为登革热,未发现DENV - 1病例。为重新评估登革热作为该地区急性发热性疾病病因的重要性,我们在南部省份重新开展发热监测,以新发现并鉴定登革热。
方法/主要发现:2012 - 2013年在南部省份最大的三级护理医院进行了一项横断面监测研究。共纳入976例因急性未分化发热住院的患者,其中男性占64.3%,儿童占31.4%。从877例(89.6%)患者中采集了恢复期血样。进行了登革病毒分离、登革热逆转录聚合酶链反应(RT - PCR)和配对免疫球蛋白G(IgG)酶联免疫吸附测定(ELISA)。在976例住院病例中,388例(39.8%)确诊急性登革热为病因,大多数病例(291例,75.0%)通过病毒学检测及多种方法得以确诊。在351例病毒学确诊的登革热病例中,320例(91.2%)由DENV - 1引起。急性登革热与自我报告的农村居住地、旅行以及降雨最多的月份有关。对所选登革病毒进行测序显示,其序列与来自中国和东南亚的序列关系最为密切,而非附近的印度。
结论/意义:由于之前的研究,我们知道该人群对这种血清型易感,在此人群中我们描述了斯里兰卡南部省份首次出现的DENV - 1疫情。在本研究中,登革热占急性发热性疾病的40%。DENV - 1在这个人口密集但以农业为主的人群中成为主要血清型,这凸显了登革热流行病学的变化以及持续监测和预防的必要性。