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Persistence of Rabies Virus-Neutralizing Antibodies after Vaccination of Rural Population following Vampire Bat Rabies Outbreak in Brazil

BACKGROUND: Animal control measures in Latin America have decreased the incidence of urban human rabies transmitted by dogs and cats; currently most cases of human rabies are transmitted by bats. In 2004–2005, rabies outbreaks in populations living in rural Brazil prompted widespread vaccination of...

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Autores principales: Medeiros, Rita, Jusot, Viviane, Houillon, Guy, Rasuli, Anvar, Martorelli, Luzia, Kataoka, Ana Paula, Mechlia, Mohamed Ben, Le Guern, Anne-Sophie, Rodrigues, Liliam, Assef, Rhomero, Maestri, Alvino, Lima, Reynaldo, Rotivel, Yolande, Bosch-Castells, Valérie, Tordo, Noël
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5031405/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27653947
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0004920
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author Medeiros, Rita
Jusot, Viviane
Houillon, Guy
Rasuli, Anvar
Martorelli, Luzia
Kataoka, Ana Paula
Mechlia, Mohamed Ben
Le Guern, Anne-Sophie
Rodrigues, Liliam
Assef, Rhomero
Maestri, Alvino
Lima, Reynaldo
Rotivel, Yolande
Bosch-Castells, Valérie
Tordo, Noël
author_facet Medeiros, Rita
Jusot, Viviane
Houillon, Guy
Rasuli, Anvar
Martorelli, Luzia
Kataoka, Ana Paula
Mechlia, Mohamed Ben
Le Guern, Anne-Sophie
Rodrigues, Liliam
Assef, Rhomero
Maestri, Alvino
Lima, Reynaldo
Rotivel, Yolande
Bosch-Castells, Valérie
Tordo, Noël
author_sort Medeiros, Rita
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Animal control measures in Latin America have decreased the incidence of urban human rabies transmitted by dogs and cats; currently most cases of human rabies are transmitted by bats. In 2004–2005, rabies outbreaks in populations living in rural Brazil prompted widespread vaccination of exposed and at-risk populations. More than 3,500 inhabitants of Augusto Correa (Pará State) received either post-exposure (PEP) or pre-exposure (PrEP) prophylaxis. This study evaluated the persistence of rabies virus-neutralizing antibodies (RVNA) annually for 4 years post-vaccination. The aim was to evaluate the impact of rabies PrEP and PEP in a population at risk living in a rural setting to help improve management of vampire bat exposure and provide additional data on the need for booster vaccination against rabies. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: This prospective study was conducted in 2007 through 2009 in a population previously vaccinated in 2005; study participants were followed-up annually. An RVNA titer >0.5 International Units (IU)/mL was chosen as the threshold of seroconversion. Participants with titers ≤0.5 IU/mL or Equivalent Units (EU)/mL at enrollment or at subsequent annual visits received booster doses of purified Vero cell rabies vaccine (PVRV). Adherence of the participants from this Amazonian community to the study protocol was excellent, with 428 of the 509 (84%) who attended the first interview in 2007 returning for the final visit in 2009. The long-term RVNA persistence was good, with 85–88.0% of the non-boosted participants evaluated at each yearly follow-up visit remaining seroconverted. Similar RVNA persistence profiles were observed in participants originally given PEP or PrEP in 2005, and the GMT of the study population remained >1 IU/mL 4 years after vaccination. At the end of the study, 51 subjects (11.9% of the interviewed population) had received at least one dose of booster since their vaccination in 2005. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This study and the events preceding it underscore the need for the health authorities in rabies enzootic countries to decide on the best strategies and timing for the introduction of routine rabies PrEP vaccination in affected areas.
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spelling pubmed-50314052016-10-10 Persistence of Rabies Virus-Neutralizing Antibodies after Vaccination of Rural Population following Vampire Bat Rabies Outbreak in Brazil Medeiros, Rita Jusot, Viviane Houillon, Guy Rasuli, Anvar Martorelli, Luzia Kataoka, Ana Paula Mechlia, Mohamed Ben Le Guern, Anne-Sophie Rodrigues, Liliam Assef, Rhomero Maestri, Alvino Lima, Reynaldo Rotivel, Yolande Bosch-Castells, Valérie Tordo, Noël PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Animal control measures in Latin America have decreased the incidence of urban human rabies transmitted by dogs and cats; currently most cases of human rabies are transmitted by bats. In 2004–2005, rabies outbreaks in populations living in rural Brazil prompted widespread vaccination of exposed and at-risk populations. More than 3,500 inhabitants of Augusto Correa (Pará State) received either post-exposure (PEP) or pre-exposure (PrEP) prophylaxis. This study evaluated the persistence of rabies virus-neutralizing antibodies (RVNA) annually for 4 years post-vaccination. The aim was to evaluate the impact of rabies PrEP and PEP in a population at risk living in a rural setting to help improve management of vampire bat exposure and provide additional data on the need for booster vaccination against rabies. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: This prospective study was conducted in 2007 through 2009 in a population previously vaccinated in 2005; study participants were followed-up annually. An RVNA titer >0.5 International Units (IU)/mL was chosen as the threshold of seroconversion. Participants with titers ≤0.5 IU/mL or Equivalent Units (EU)/mL at enrollment or at subsequent annual visits received booster doses of purified Vero cell rabies vaccine (PVRV). Adherence of the participants from this Amazonian community to the study protocol was excellent, with 428 of the 509 (84%) who attended the first interview in 2007 returning for the final visit in 2009. The long-term RVNA persistence was good, with 85–88.0% of the non-boosted participants evaluated at each yearly follow-up visit remaining seroconverted. Similar RVNA persistence profiles were observed in participants originally given PEP or PrEP in 2005, and the GMT of the study population remained >1 IU/mL 4 years after vaccination. At the end of the study, 51 subjects (11.9% of the interviewed population) had received at least one dose of booster since their vaccination in 2005. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This study and the events preceding it underscore the need for the health authorities in rabies enzootic countries to decide on the best strategies and timing for the introduction of routine rabies PrEP vaccination in affected areas. Public Library of Science 2016-09-21 /pmc/articles/PMC5031405/ /pubmed/27653947 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0004920 Text en © 2016 Medeiros et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Medeiros, Rita
Jusot, Viviane
Houillon, Guy
Rasuli, Anvar
Martorelli, Luzia
Kataoka, Ana Paula
Mechlia, Mohamed Ben
Le Guern, Anne-Sophie
Rodrigues, Liliam
Assef, Rhomero
Maestri, Alvino
Lima, Reynaldo
Rotivel, Yolande
Bosch-Castells, Valérie
Tordo, Noël
Persistence of Rabies Virus-Neutralizing Antibodies after Vaccination of Rural Population following Vampire Bat Rabies Outbreak in Brazil
title Persistence of Rabies Virus-Neutralizing Antibodies after Vaccination of Rural Population following Vampire Bat Rabies Outbreak in Brazil
title_full Persistence of Rabies Virus-Neutralizing Antibodies after Vaccination of Rural Population following Vampire Bat Rabies Outbreak in Brazil
title_fullStr Persistence of Rabies Virus-Neutralizing Antibodies after Vaccination of Rural Population following Vampire Bat Rabies Outbreak in Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Persistence of Rabies Virus-Neutralizing Antibodies after Vaccination of Rural Population following Vampire Bat Rabies Outbreak in Brazil
title_short Persistence of Rabies Virus-Neutralizing Antibodies after Vaccination of Rural Population following Vampire Bat Rabies Outbreak in Brazil
title_sort persistence of rabies virus-neutralizing antibodies after vaccination of rural population following vampire bat rabies outbreak in brazil
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5031405/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27653947
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0004920
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