Δημοσίευση

West Nile virus in humans, Greece, 2018: the largest seasonal number of cases, 9 years after its emergence in the country.

ΤίτλοςWest Nile virus in humans, Greece, 2018: the largest seasonal number of cases, 9 years after its emergence in the country.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsPervanidou, D., Vakali A., Georgakopoulou T., Panagiotopoulos T., Patsoula E., Koliopoulos G., Politis C., Stamoulis K., Gavana E., Pappa S., Mavrouli M., Emmanouil M., Sourvinos G., Mentis A., Tsakris A., Hadjichristodoulou C., Tsiodras S., & Papa A.
JournalEuro Surveill
Volume25
Issue32
Date Published2020 08
ISSN1560-7917
Abstract

BackgroundHuman cases of West Nile virus (WNV) infection are recorded since 2010 in Greece, with seasonal outbreaks occurring almost annually. Enhanced surveillance has been implemented since 2010, to promptly characterise cases' temporal and geographical distribution and inform authorities for implementation of appropriate measures (mosquito control, health education, blood safety).AimWe describe the epidemiology of WNV human infections in Greece focusing on the 2018 season.MethodsThe National Public Health Organization advised physicians to test all suspect WNV infection cases and refer samples to reference laboratories. Laboratories notified diagnosed cases on a daily basis. Treating physicians, patients, and infected blood donors were interviewed within 48 hours after diagnosis and the probable infection location was identified. Hospitalised cases were followed up until discharge.ResultsA total of 317 autochthonous WNV infection cases were diagnosed in 2018. Among them, 243 cases had neuroinvasive disease (WNND), representing a 23% increase of WNND cases compared with 2010, the previous most intense season. There were 51 deaths. Cases started occurring from week 22, earlier than usual. Both rural and urban areas were affected, with 86 (26% of the total) municipalities belonging to seven (54% of the total) regions recording cases. Two major epicentres were identified in Attica and Central Macedonia regions.ConclusionsThe largest number of human cases of WNV infection ever recorded in Greece occurred in 2018, with a wide geographical distribution, suggesting intense virus circulation. Enhanced surveillance is vital for the early detection of human cases and the prompt implementation of response measures.

DOI10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2020.25.32.1900543
Alternate JournalEuro Surveill
PubMed ID32794446
PubMed Central IDPMC7427301

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