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Epidemiologic and spatiotemporal trends of Zika Virus disease during the 2016 epidemic in Puerto Rico

BACKGROUND: After Zika virus (ZIKV) emerged in the Americas, laboratory-based surveillance for arboviral diseases in Puerto Rico was adapted to include ZIKV disease. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Suspected cases of arboviral disease reported to Puerto Rico Department of Health were tested for evidence of in...

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Autores principales: Sharp, Tyler M., Quandelacy, Talia M., Adams, Laura E., Aponte, Jomil Torres, Lozier, Matthew J., Ryff, Kyle, Flores, Mitchelle, Rivera, Aidsa, Santiago, Gilberto A., Muñoz-Jordán, Jorge L., Alvarado, Luisa I., Rivera-Amill, Vanessa, Garcia-Negrón, Myriam, Waterman, Stephen H., Paz-Bailey, Gabriela, Johansson, Michael A., Rivera-Garcia, Brenda
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7529257/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32956416
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008532
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author Sharp, Tyler M.
Quandelacy, Talia M.
Adams, Laura E.
Aponte, Jomil Torres
Lozier, Matthew J.
Ryff, Kyle
Flores, Mitchelle
Rivera, Aidsa
Santiago, Gilberto A.
Muñoz-Jordán, Jorge L.
Alvarado, Luisa I.
Rivera-Amill, Vanessa
Garcia-Negrón, Myriam
Waterman, Stephen H.
Paz-Bailey, Gabriela
Johansson, Michael A.
Rivera-Garcia, Brenda
author_facet Sharp, Tyler M.
Quandelacy, Talia M.
Adams, Laura E.
Aponte, Jomil Torres
Lozier, Matthew J.
Ryff, Kyle
Flores, Mitchelle
Rivera, Aidsa
Santiago, Gilberto A.
Muñoz-Jordán, Jorge L.
Alvarado, Luisa I.
Rivera-Amill, Vanessa
Garcia-Negrón, Myriam
Waterman, Stephen H.
Paz-Bailey, Gabriela
Johansson, Michael A.
Rivera-Garcia, Brenda
author_sort Sharp, Tyler M.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: After Zika virus (ZIKV) emerged in the Americas, laboratory-based surveillance for arboviral diseases in Puerto Rico was adapted to include ZIKV disease. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Suspected cases of arboviral disease reported to Puerto Rico Department of Health were tested for evidence of infection with Zika, dengue, and chikungunya viruses by RT-PCR and IgM ELISA. To describe spatiotemporal trends among confirmed ZIKV disease cases, we analyzed the relationship between municipality-level socio-demographic, climatic, and spatial factors, and both time to detection of the first ZIKV disease case and the midpoint of the outbreak. During November 2015–December 2016, a total of 71,618 suspected arboviral disease cases were reported, of which 39,717 (55.5%; 1.1 cases per 100 residents) tested positive for ZIKV infection. The epidemic peaked in August 2016, when 71.5% of arboviral disease cases reported weekly tested positive for ZIKV infection. Incidence of ZIKV disease was highest among 20–29-year-olds (1.6 cases per 100 residents), and most (62.3%) cases were female. The most frequently reported symptoms were rash (83.0%), headache (64.6%), and myalgia (63.3%). Few patients were hospitalized (1.2%), and 13 (<0.1%) died. Early detection of ZIKV disease cases was associated with increased population size (log hazard ratio [HR]: -0.22 [95% confidence interval -0.29, -0.14]), eastern longitude (log HR: -1.04 [-1.17, -0.91]), and proximity to a city (spline estimated degrees of freedom [edf] = 2.0). Earlier midpoints of the outbreak were associated with northern latitude (log HR: -0.30 [-0.32, -0.29]), eastern longitude (spline edf = 6.5), and higher mean monthly temperature (log HR: -0.04 [-0.05, -0.03]). Higher incidence of ZIKV disease was associated with lower mean precipitation, but not socioeconomic factors. CONCLUSIONS: During the ZIKV epidemic in Puerto Rico, 1% of residents were reported to public health authorities and had laboratory evidence of ZIKV disease. Transmission was first detected in urban areas of eastern Puerto Rico, where transmission also peaked earlier. These trends suggest that ZIKV was first introduced to Puerto Rico in the east before disseminating throughout the island.
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spelling pubmed-75292572020-10-02 Epidemiologic and spatiotemporal trends of Zika Virus disease during the 2016 epidemic in Puerto Rico Sharp, Tyler M. Quandelacy, Talia M. Adams, Laura E. Aponte, Jomil Torres Lozier, Matthew J. Ryff, Kyle Flores, Mitchelle Rivera, Aidsa Santiago, Gilberto A. Muñoz-Jordán, Jorge L. Alvarado, Luisa I. Rivera-Amill, Vanessa Garcia-Negrón, Myriam Waterman, Stephen H. Paz-Bailey, Gabriela Johansson, Michael A. Rivera-Garcia, Brenda PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: After Zika virus (ZIKV) emerged in the Americas, laboratory-based surveillance for arboviral diseases in Puerto Rico was adapted to include ZIKV disease. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Suspected cases of arboviral disease reported to Puerto Rico Department of Health were tested for evidence of infection with Zika, dengue, and chikungunya viruses by RT-PCR and IgM ELISA. To describe spatiotemporal trends among confirmed ZIKV disease cases, we analyzed the relationship between municipality-level socio-demographic, climatic, and spatial factors, and both time to detection of the first ZIKV disease case and the midpoint of the outbreak. During November 2015–December 2016, a total of 71,618 suspected arboviral disease cases were reported, of which 39,717 (55.5%; 1.1 cases per 100 residents) tested positive for ZIKV infection. The epidemic peaked in August 2016, when 71.5% of arboviral disease cases reported weekly tested positive for ZIKV infection. Incidence of ZIKV disease was highest among 20–29-year-olds (1.6 cases per 100 residents), and most (62.3%) cases were female. The most frequently reported symptoms were rash (83.0%), headache (64.6%), and myalgia (63.3%). Few patients were hospitalized (1.2%), and 13 (<0.1%) died. Early detection of ZIKV disease cases was associated with increased population size (log hazard ratio [HR]: -0.22 [95% confidence interval -0.29, -0.14]), eastern longitude (log HR: -1.04 [-1.17, -0.91]), and proximity to a city (spline estimated degrees of freedom [edf] = 2.0). Earlier midpoints of the outbreak were associated with northern latitude (log HR: -0.30 [-0.32, -0.29]), eastern longitude (spline edf = 6.5), and higher mean monthly temperature (log HR: -0.04 [-0.05, -0.03]). Higher incidence of ZIKV disease was associated with lower mean precipitation, but not socioeconomic factors. CONCLUSIONS: During the ZIKV epidemic in Puerto Rico, 1% of residents were reported to public health authorities and had laboratory evidence of ZIKV disease. Transmission was first detected in urban areas of eastern Puerto Rico, where transmission also peaked earlier. These trends suggest that ZIKV was first introduced to Puerto Rico in the east before disseminating throughout the island. Public Library of Science 2020-09-21 /pmc/articles/PMC7529257/ /pubmed/32956416 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008532 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sharp, Tyler M.
Quandelacy, Talia M.
Adams, Laura E.
Aponte, Jomil Torres
Lozier, Matthew J.
Ryff, Kyle
Flores, Mitchelle
Rivera, Aidsa
Santiago, Gilberto A.
Muñoz-Jordán, Jorge L.
Alvarado, Luisa I.
Rivera-Amill, Vanessa
Garcia-Negrón, Myriam
Waterman, Stephen H.
Paz-Bailey, Gabriela
Johansson, Michael A.
Rivera-Garcia, Brenda
Epidemiologic and spatiotemporal trends of Zika Virus disease during the 2016 epidemic in Puerto Rico
title Epidemiologic and spatiotemporal trends of Zika Virus disease during the 2016 epidemic in Puerto Rico
title_full Epidemiologic and spatiotemporal trends of Zika Virus disease during the 2016 epidemic in Puerto Rico
title_fullStr Epidemiologic and spatiotemporal trends of Zika Virus disease during the 2016 epidemic in Puerto Rico
title_full_unstemmed Epidemiologic and spatiotemporal trends of Zika Virus disease during the 2016 epidemic in Puerto Rico
title_short Epidemiologic and spatiotemporal trends of Zika Virus disease during the 2016 epidemic in Puerto Rico
title_sort epidemiologic and spatiotemporal trends of zika virus disease during the 2016 epidemic in puerto rico
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7529257/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32956416
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008532
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