| Literature DB >> 22877581 |
M A P Sáfadi1, S González-Ayala2, A Jäkel3, H Wieffer3, C Moreno4, A Vyse5.
Abstract
Meningococcal disease is mostly endemic in Latin America, with periodic occurrences of outbreaks and epidemics over the last few decades. This literature review summarizes the available epidemiological data for this region between 1945 and 2010. Incidence rates and serogroup distribution differ from country to country and over time. Serogroups A, B, and C have all been major causes of meningococcal disease since the 1970s. In the last decade serogroups W135 and Y may now be emerging in certain countries, with serogroup A virtually disappearing. Although progress has been made in improving and coordinating the surveillance of invasive disease, the uniformity and quality of reported data reflect the fact that the current surveillance systems focus on passive rather than active reporting, hence the reliability of data may vary between countries. Consideration of vaccination policies to control meningococcal disease can only be made with a sufficient understanding of the changing epidemiology in the region.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22877581 PMCID: PMC3566594 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268812001689
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Incidence and case-fatality rates of meningococcal disease, with serogroup specific information, if available, in several countries in Latin America (arranged by country and year)
| Ref. | Region | Year of observation | Incidence | CFR | Serogroup information |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Mexico | 1993–2003 | Low incidence | NR | NR |
| [ | Mexico | 1990–2004 | 0–78 cases/year | NR | NR |
| [ | Mexico | 1990–2002 | 0–73 cases/year | NR | NR |
| 2003–2008 | 52–82 cases/year | NR | NR | ||
| [ | Cuba | 0·3–0·7/100 000 | 0–10·5% | NR | |
| [ | Cuba | 1983 | 14·4/100 000 | NR | 100% B |
| 1992 | 1·4/100 000 | ||||
| [ | Panama | 1990 | 4·6/100 000 | NR | NR |
| 2008 | 1/100 000 | NR | NR | ||
| [ | Costa Rica | 1970–1973 | 2·4–7·8/100 000 | 11–18% | NR |
| North | |||||
| [ | Manaus, Amazonas | 1998–2002 | 7·8/100 000 | 14% | 2002: 78·2% B, 7·2% C |
| North-East | |||||
| [ | Salvador (Bahia) | 1996–2001 | 1·24–2·23/100 000 | 8% | 82% B, 16% C, 2% W135, 0·3% Y |
| South | |||||
| [ | Rio Grande do Sul | 1995–2003 | 1·8–3·5/100 000 | 17% | 79% B, 14·1% C, 6·2% W135, 0·7% Other |
| [ | Rio Grande do Sul | 2003–2005 | 1·54/100 000 | NR | 64% B, 18% C, 17% W135, 1% Y |
| [ | Santa Catarina | 1988–1991 | 1·8–5·4/100 000 | 19·6% | 1989–1990 B epidemic |
| [ | Santa Catarina | 1971–1975 (epidemic) | 9·6/100 000 | 21·1% | NR |
| 1976–1985 (endemic) | 3·2/100 000 | 20·6% | 1981–1985: B 83·9%, C 2·1%, Other 14% | ||
| 1986–2000 (epidemic) | 7·4/100 000 | 15·2% | B 69·1%, C 27·7%, Other 3·2% | ||
| [ | Curitiba | 1989 | 2·14/100 000 | NR | B 70·6%, C 23·5%, Other 5·9% |
| Parana | 1990 | 10·45/100 000 | Epidemic of B 17·9%, C 82·1%, Other 0% | ||
| 1991 | 6·5/100 000 | NR | B 29·3%, C 70·7%, Other 0% | ||
| South-East | |||||
| [ | Sao Paulo | 1977 | 3·3/100 000 | NR | NR |
| 1982 | 1·05/100 000 | NR | NR | ||
| 1990 | 5·4/100 000 | NR | NR | ||
| [ | Sao Paulo | Overall 11·3/100 000 | 9·2% | ||
| [ | Sao Paulo | 1920–26 (epidemic) | 4·7–12·2/100 000 | NR | NR |
| 1945–51 (epidemic) | 4·6–24·2/100 000 | NR | NR | ||
| 1971–76 (epidemic) | 5·9–180/100 000 | NR | NR | ||
| 1988–2000 (epidemic) | 4·4–8·25/100 000 | NR | NR | ||
| [ | Sao Paulo | 1958–19676 | NR | 19·1% | NR |
| 1968–1972 | 13·7% | NR | |||
| 1958–1972 (total) | 15·3% | NR | |||
| [ | Campinas Sao Paulo | 1993–1998 | NR | 17·3% | |
| [ | Rio de Janeiro | 1976–1979 (post- epidemic) | 3·51/100 000 | 18·4% | A 63·4%, B 4·9%, C 31·7% |
| 1980–1986 (Endemic) | 1·67/100 000 | 16·2% | A 38·3%, B 44·4%, C 17·3% | ||
| 1987–1994 (Epidemic) | 6·53/100 000 | 16·4% | A 1·1%, B 80·1%, C 18·8% | ||
| [ | Whole country | 2000–2010 | 2·52–1·36/100 000 | 20% | NR |
| [ | Colombia | 1995–1998 | 0·6–0·8/100 000 | NR | NR |
| Uruguay | |||||
| [ | Canelones | 2000–2001 | 1·5/1 000 000 | 27% (epidemic) | NR |
| 2001–2002 | 3·4/100 000 | NR | NR | ||
| After vaccination | 1·8/100 000 | 12·5% | NR | ||
| Montevideo | 2000–2001 | 1·5/1 000 000 | 5% | NR | |
| 2001–2002 | 2·3/100 000 | 10% | NR | ||
| After vaccination | 1·8/100 000 | 4·5% | NR | ||
| [ | Argentina | 1990–2003 | 0·6–2·9/100 000 | NR | NR |
| [ | Argentina | (not specified) | 0·7/100 000 | NR | NR |
| [ | Iquique | 1979–1987 | Attack rate >20/ 100 000/year during serogroup B outbreak | 5·7% | NR |
| [ | Santiago | 1994 | 1993: 5·9/100 000 (epidemic) | NR | NR |
| [ | Chile | 2009 | 0·6/100 000 | 8·9% | NR |
CFR, Case-fatality rate; NR, not recorded.
Fig. 1.Chronological overview of epidemics and outbreaks in Latin America by serogroup. Serogroups associated with each epidemic or outbreak are listed alongside the year of the event and the country. The occurrence of serogroup A is shown in light grey, serogroup C in dark grey, serogroup B is highlighted in white, and serogroup W135 in black.