Grossi-Soyster Elysse N, Cook Elizabeth A J, de Glanville William A, Thomas Lian F, Krystosik Amy R, Lee Justin, Wamae C Njeri, Kariuki Samuel, Fèvre Eric M, LaBeaud A Desiree
Departments of Pediatrics, Infectious Disease Division, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, United States of America.
Zoonotic and Emerging Diseases Group, International Livestock Research Institute, Nairobi, Kenya.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2017 Oct 17;11(10):e0005998. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005998. eCollection 2017 Oct.
Alphaviruses, such as chikungunya virus, and flaviviruses, such as dengue virus, are (re)-emerging arboviruses that are endemic in tropical environments. In Africa, arbovirus infections are often undiagnosed and unreported, with febrile illnesses often assumed to be malaria. This cross-sectional study aimed to characterize the seroprevalence of alphaviruses and flaviviruses among children (ages 5-14, n = 250) and adults (ages 15 ≥ 75, n = 250) in western Kenya. Risk factors for seropositivity were explored using Lasso regression. Overall, 67% of participants showed alphavirus seropositivity (CI95 63%-70%), and 1.6% of participants showed flavivirus seropositivity (CI95 0.7%-3%). Children aged 10-14 were more likely to be seropositive to an alphavirus than adults (p < 0.001), suggesting a recent transmission period. Alphavirus and flavivirus seropositivity was detected in the youngest participants (age 5-9), providing evidence of inter-epidemic transmission. Demographic variables that were significantly different amongst those with previous infection versus those without infection included age, education level, and occupation. Behavioral and environmental variables significantly different amongst those in with previous infection to those without infection included taking animals for grazing, fishing, and recent village flooding. Experience of recent fever was also found to be a significant indicator of infection (p = 0.027). These results confirm alphavirus and flavivirus exposure in western Kenya, while illustrating significantly higher alphavirus transmission compared to previous studies.
甲病毒,如基孔肯雅病毒,以及黄病毒,如登革病毒,是(重新)出现的虫媒病毒,在热带环境中呈地方性流行。在非洲,虫媒病毒感染往往未被诊断和报告,发热性疾病常常被认为是疟疾。这项横断面研究旨在描述肯尼亚西部儿童(5至14岁,n = 250)和成人(15至75岁及以上,n = 250)中甲病毒和黄病毒的血清阳性率特征。使用套索回归探索血清阳性的危险因素。总体而言,67%的参与者显示甲病毒血清阳性(CI95 63%-70%),1.6%的参与者显示黄病毒血清阳性(CI95 0.7%-3%)。10至14岁的儿童比成人更有可能对甲病毒呈血清阳性(p < 0.001),这表明近期有传播期。在最年幼的参与者(5至9岁)中检测到甲病毒和黄病毒血清阳性,这为流行间期传播提供了证据。在有既往感染与无感染的人群中,显著不同的人口统计学变量包括年龄、教育水平和职业。在有既往感染与无感染的人群中,显著不同的行为和环境变量包括带动物放牧、捕鱼以及近期村庄洪水。近期发热经历也被发现是感染的一个重要指标(p = 0.027)。这些结果证实了肯尼亚西部存在甲病毒和黄病毒暴露,同时表明与先前研究相比,甲病毒传播显著更高。