Literature DB >> 16509764

Influenza in tropical regions.

Cécile Viboud1, Wladimir J Alonso, Lone Simonsen.   

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16509764      PMCID: PMC1391975          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0030089

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS Med        ISSN: 1549-1277            Impact factor:   11.069


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The global burden of influenza on morbidity and mortality is considerable, with an estimated 1 million annual deaths worldwide [ 1]. In temperate regions, there are clear seasonal variations in the occurrence of influenza, with a marked peak in cold winter months [ 2]. In contrast, seasonality is less defined in tropical regions—here, there is high background influenza activity throughout the year, on top of which epidemics occur at intermediate months between the influenza season in temperate countries of the Northern and Southern hemispheres. Influenza seasonal patterns in the Americas are summarized in Figure 1, which illustrates the transition between the Northern and Southern hemispheres. Very little is known about exactly how and why the seasonality of influenza varies with latitude. No link with environmental conditions has been convincingly shown, although influenza activity appears to coincide with the rainy season in some tropical countries [ 3].
Figure 1

Comparison of Influenza Seasonal Patterns in Temperate and Tropical Countries in the Americas (From Lat +39°N to -35°S) The latitude of the capital city is indicated for each country in the legend

(A) Weekly distribution of influenza laboratory isolates (from week 1 to week 52; weekly frequency ( y-axis) is calculated as the weekly number of isolates divided by the annual number of isolates).

(B) Weekly numbers of isolates were aggregated over four-week periods to show a (nearly) monthly distribution of influenza circulation. Each color represents a different month (color bar on the right). Note the transition in seasonal patterns from north to south, ranging from marked seasonal winter activity centered around January in the US, to uniform circulation throughout the year in Columbia and again, strong winter epidemics center around July in Argentina.

Influenza viral surveillance data compiled from WHO Flunet.

Comparison of Influenza Seasonal Patterns in Temperate and Tropical Countries in the Americas (From Lat +39°N to -35°S) The latitude of the capital city is indicated for each country in the legend

(A) Weekly distribution of influenza laboratory isolates (from week 1 to week 52; weekly frequency ( y-axis) is calculated as the weekly number of isolates divided by the annual number of isolates). (B) Weekly numbers of isolates were aggregated over four-week periods to show a (nearly) monthly distribution of influenza circulation. Each color represents a different month (color bar on the right). Note the transition in seasonal patterns from north to south, ranging from marked seasonal winter activity centered around January in the US, to uniform circulation throughout the year in Columbia and again, strong winter epidemics center around July in Argentina. Influenza viral surveillance data compiled from WHO Flunet. Until very recently, the impact of influenza on health was believed to be insignificant in tropical regions. But this impression may be changing, in part thanks to the recent studies by Joseph S. M. Peiris and his colleagues from Hong Kong, one of which appears in this issue of PLoS Medicine [ 4]. Hong Kong is a subtropical city located within the likely epicenter of pandemic influenza in Southeast Asia [ 5].

Methods for Estimating the Burden of Influenza

Estimating the burden of influenza on hospitalizations and deaths is not straightforward in temperate countries, and it is even less so in tropical countries [ 2]. Severe clinical outcomes are often caused by secondary bacterial infections, and a primary influenza infection may be unrecognized. Additionally, laboratory confirmation of influenza infection is rarely conducted. As a result, most influenza-related hospitalizations and deaths are not attributed to influenza on discharge forms and death certificates, and statistical methods are necessary to assess the true burden of influenza on health. Traditionally, for temperate countries, the impact of a particular influenza epidemic is estimated as the number of “excess deaths” or “excess cases” above a seasonal baseline. This approach relies on identifying periods without influenza activity to generate a model baseline of expected winter deaths (or cases) [ 6–8]. But the approach fails in tropical regions, where there is no well-defined non-influenza period ( Figure 1). An alternative method recently developed by the United States Centers for Disease Control uses virus surveillance data to guide models of burden, assuming a proportional relation between virus activity and the number of hospitalization or deaths attributable to influenza [ 9, 10]. For the US, both traditional and new methods produced very similar estimates of influenza mortality burden ( Table 1 and [ 11, 12]). In their Hong Kong study, Peiris et al. appropriately used a variation of the virus-guided modeling approach by linking weekly hospital discharges with weekly prevalence of influenza virus in respiratory specimens sampled in the community [ 4].
Table 1

Comparison of the Average Annual Burden of Influenza on Hospitalization and Death in Recent Years in Hong Kong and the US

Influenza Burden is Broadly Similar in Hong Kong and the US

Peiris et al. found that the annual influenza-related hospitalization rates are quite similar in Hong Kong and temperate countries ( Table 1), confirming their earlier studies [ 13, 14]. In Hong Kong, as in many other countries, the impact of influenza is seen not only on pneumonia and influenza outcomes [ 12, 15], but also on a wider range of chronic health conditions such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases [ 12, 15]. Peiris et al. also report that influenza-related hospitalization rates vary with age as a U-shaped curve, where young infants and elderly are at highest risk of severe disease outcome, reminiscent of the age pattern of interpandemic influenza in the US and other temperate countries. However, one difference between Hong Kong and US children stands out: these authors had shown in a previous hospital cohort study that young children in Hong Kong had a hospitalization rate that was roughly 10-fold higher than in the US ( Table 1 and [ 16]). The reasons for this substantial discrepancy are elusive, but may in part be attributed to the notorious difficulty of assessing with accuracy the impact of influenza on children. There is a particularly high background rate of acute respiratory illnesses caused by other respiratory pathogens in this age group. Unfortunately, the authors did not reexamine this apparent discrepancy in the new, larger citywide study published this month [ 4]—so the question of a true regional difference in pediatric rates of influenza-related pneumonia hospitalizations remains unresolved.

The Need for More Influenza Studies in Tropical Regions

Many research questions about influenza in tropical regions remain unanswered. For instance, Hong Kong is a wealthy subtropical city, with a higher per-capita gross domestic product than Australia or New Zealand. Thus, the present Hong Kong study cannot inform us about the impact of influenza in poor tropical countries, where the severity of infections is likely compounded by malnutrition, limited supplies of antibiotics to treat secondary bacterial infections, and limited access to hospital care. Modeling the influenza burden in tropical countries relies on good-quality virus surveillance data. And because of large year-to-year variations in the impact of influenza, modeling also depends on the availability of several years' worth of data. Since influenza surveillance efforts were only recently initiated in tropical countries, studies of the influenza burden are generally of short duration (five years in the study by Peiris et al. [ 4]). The information generated so far during a period mostly dominated by more pathogenic influenza A (H3N2) viruses may not reflect the average influenza experience in Hong Kong [ 13]. An additional shortcoming of the virus-driven modeling approach is that it cannot study past epidemics and pandemics for which no viral surveillance data was collected. Furthermore in this approach, deaths or hospitalizations attributed to influenza are directly proportional to the intensity of virus activity, and therefore, week-to-week variations in virus isolation rates should truly reflect changes in disease prevalence and not sampling error. Laboratory surveillance needs to be strengthened before modeling of disease burden becomes feasible in most tropical countries [ 1]. Finally, more studies are needed to elucidate influenza seasonal patterns across a large range of latitudes, representing several tropical countries in both hemispheres. Of particular interest is the long-standing question of persistence: does influenza persist in temperate countries all year long (through undetectable chains of transmission in summer) or is it reintroduced from the Tropics each year at the beginning of winter? A combination of enhanced virus surveillance and sequence analysis of the viral genome of circulating strains is an important avenue for future research to address this question, and Hong Kong may be an essential sampling site in this respect. Resolving this question is of paramount importance to vaccine composition and influenza control in tropical regions. Because of year-round influenza activity, it is not clear whether the Northern Hemisphere or Southern Hemisphere recommended composition should be used, and what the optimal timing for the vaccination campaign would be. Indeed, the influenza vaccination strategy may have to be tailored to each individual tropical region, based on local prevalence, timing, cycling of influenza strains, and how they match the strains circulating in temperate areas.

Who Should Be Vaccinated?

Peiris and colleagues' study implies that influenza is an underappreciated public health issue in tropical regions—indeed, influenza vaccine coverage is far lower in Hong Kong than in most developed countries with a temperate climate [ 17]. The authors argue for wider use of influenza vaccines in the elderly and chronically ill; however, this strategy has not been associated with any measurable reduction in influenza-related mortality in the US [ 8], likely in part because of reduced responsiveness to the vaccine in the elderly [ 18]. In the US and Europe, moving toward universal vaccination is now being discussed as a strategy to further reduce the impact of influenza in high-risk groups by indirect means. Vaccinating schoolchildren may be especially beneficial in this regard, since they are the main spreader of influenza in schools and households [ 19–21]. If the unusually high impact of influenza in young Hong Kong children is real, then this would be an additional argument for vaccinating schoolchildren in this city, as preschoolers are likely to contract influenza from their older siblings [ 22].
  21 in total

1.  Influenza vaccination in 2000: recommendations and vaccine use in 50 developed and rapidly developing countries.

Authors:  G A van Essen; A M Palache; E Forleo; D S Fedson
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2003-05-01       Impact factor: 3.641

2.  Influenza-associated mortality in Hong Kong.

Authors:  Chit-Ming Wong; King-Pan Chan; Anthony Johnson Hedley; J S Malik Peiris
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2004-11-10       Impact factor: 9.079

Review 3.  Antibody response to influenza vaccination in the elderly: a quantitative review.

Authors:  Katherine Goodwin; Cécile Viboud; Lone Simonsen
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2005-09-19       Impact factor: 3.641

4.  Methods for current statistical analysis of excess pneumonia-influenza deaths.

Authors:  Robert E Serfling
Journal:  Public Health Rep       Date:  1963-06       Impact factor: 2.792

5.  Impact of influenza vaccination on seasonal mortality in the US elderly population.

Authors:  Lone Simonsen; Thomas A Reichert; Cecile Viboud; William C Blackwelder; Robert J Taylor; Mark A Miller
Journal:  Arch Intern Med       Date:  2005-02-14

Review 6.  Is China an influenza epicentre?

Authors:  K F Shortridge
Journal:  Chin Med J (Engl)       Date:  1997-08       Impact factor: 2.628

7.  Influenza virus infections in infants.

Authors:  W P Glezen; L H Taber; A L Frank; W C Gruber; P A Piedra
Journal:  Pediatr Infect Dis J       Date:  1997-11       Impact factor: 2.129

8.  Risk factors of influenza transmission in households.

Authors:  Cécile Viboud; Pierre-Yves Boëlle; Simon Cauchemez; Audrey Lavenu; Alain-Jacques Valleron; Antoine Flahault; Fabrice Carrat
Journal:  Br J Gen Pract       Date:  2004-09       Impact factor: 5.386

Review 9.  Epidemiology and seasonality of respiratory tract virus infections in the tropics.

Authors:  Lynette Pei-Chi Shek; Bee-Wah Lee
Journal:  Paediatr Respir Rev       Date:  2003-06       Impact factor: 2.726

10.  Influenza-associated hospitalizations in the United States.

Authors:  William W Thompson; David K Shay; Eric Weintraub; Lynnette Brammer; Carolyn B Bridges; Nancy J Cox; Keiji Fukuda
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2004-09-15       Impact factor: 56.272

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2.  Design and initiation of a study to assess the direct and indirect effects of influenza vaccine given to children in rural India.

Authors:  Wayne Sullender; Karen Fowler; Anand Krishnan; Vivek Gupta; Lawrence H Moulton; Kathryn Lafond; Marc-Alain Widdowson; Renu B Lal; Shobha Broor
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3.  Absolute humidity and pandemic versus epidemic influenza.

Authors:  Jeffrey Shaman; Edward Goldstein; Marc Lipsitch
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4.  Temperature, Humidity and Latitude Analysis to Predict Potential Spread and Seasonality for COVID-19.

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Journal:  SSRN       Date:  2020-03-09

5.  Seasonal influenza in the United States, France, and Australia: transmission and prospects for control.

Authors:  G Chowell; M A Miller; C Viboud
Journal:  Epidemiol Infect       Date:  2007-07-18       Impact factor: 2.451

6.  Influenza seasonality: lifting the fog.

Authors:  Marc Lipsitch; Cécile Viboud
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2009-03-10       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 7.  Influenza vaccines: an Asia-Pacific perspective.

Authors:  Lance C Jennings
Journal:  Influenza Other Respir Viruses       Date:  2013-11       Impact factor: 4.380

Review 8.  The evolution of seasonal influenza viruses.

Authors:  Velislava N Petrova; Colin A Russell
Journal:  Nat Rev Microbiol       Date:  2017-10-30       Impact factor: 60.633

9.  The evolutionary dynamics of influenza A and B viruses in the tropical city of Managua, Nicaragua.

Authors:  Martha I Nelson; Angel Balmaseda; Guillermina Kuan; Saira Saborio; Xudong Lin; Rebecca A Halpin; Timothy B Stockwell; David E Wentworth; Eva Harris; Aubree Gordon
Journal:  Virology       Date:  2014-06-22       Impact factor: 3.616

Review 10.  Contrasting the epidemiological and evolutionary dynamics of influenza spatial transmission.

Authors:  Cécile Viboud; Martha I Nelson; Yi Tan; Edward C Holmes
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2013-02-04       Impact factor: 6.237

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