| Literature DB >> 25938466 |
Mandeep S Chadha1, Varsha A Potdar1, Siddhartha Saha2, Parvaiz A Koul3, Shobha Broor4, Lalit Dar4, Mamta Chawla-Sarkar5, Dipankar Biswas6, Palani Gunasekaran7, Asha Mary Abraham8, Sunanda Shrikhande9, Amita Jain10, Balakrishnan Anukumar11, Renu B Lal2, Akhilesh C Mishra1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Influenza surveillance is an important tool to identify emerging/reemerging strains, and defining seasonality. We describe the distinct patterns of circulating strains of the virus in different areas in India from 2009 to 2013.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25938466 PMCID: PMC4418715 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0124122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Influenza positivity from 10 sentinel surveillance sites in India.
| City, State | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Sample Tested | NA | NA | 771 | 1414 | 1735 | 3920 |
| Influenza Positives | 162 (21.2%) | 238 (16.8%) | 305 (17.6%) | 705 (18.0%) | |||
|
| Sample Tested | 1053 | 663 | 1006 | 1511 | 1338 | 5571 |
| Influenza Positives | 311 (29.5%) | 103 (15.5%) | 76 (7.6%) | 145 (9.6%) | 174 (13.0%) | 809 (14.5%) | |
|
| Sample Tested | 642 | 731 | 599 | 695 | 242 | 2909 |
| Influenza Positives | 111 (17.3%) | 89 (12.2%) | 74 (12.4%) | 156 (22.4%) | 34 (14.0%) | 464 (16.0%) | |
|
| Sample Tested | NA | NA | 951 | 1776 | 1257 | 3984 |
| Influenza Positives | 94 (9.9%) | 340 (19.1%) | 118 (9.4%) | 552 (13.9%) | |||
|
| Sample Tested | 455 | 896 | 1038 | 2211 | 962 | 5562 |
| Influenza Positives | 72 (15.8%) | 181 (20.2%) | 242 (23.3%) | 206 (9.3%) | 63 (6.5%) | 764 (13.7%) | |
|
| Sample Tested | NA | NA | 590 | 917 | 1172 | 2679 |
| Influenza Positives | 29 (4.9%) | 99 (10.8%) | 165 (14.1%) | 293 (10.9%) | |||
|
| Sample Tested | 1746 | 1298 | 853 | 1029 | 962 | 5888 |
| Influenza Positives | 391 (22.4%) | 279 (21.5%) | 142 (16.6%) | 95 (9.2%) | 85 (8.8%) | 992 (16.8%) | |
|
| Sample Tested | 18821 | 7811 | 1523 | 1291 | 751 | 5959 |
| Influenza Positives | 1718 (9.1%) | 667 (8.5%) | 208 (13.7%) | 104 (8.1%) | 55 (7.3%) | 560 (9.4%) | |
|
| Sample Tested | 482 | 399 | 543 | 1021 | 587 | 3032 |
| Influenza Positives | 92 (19.1%) | 72 (18%) | 80 (14.7%) | 163 (16%) | 127 (21.6%) | 534 (17.6%) | |
|
| Sample Tested | 824 | 2457 | 1342 | 4623 | ||
| Influenza Positives | NA | NA | 154 (18.4%) | 215 (8.8%) | 137 (10.2%) | 506 (10.9%) | |
|
| Sample Tested | 23199 | 11798 | 8698 | 14322 | 10348 | 44127 |
| Influenza Positives | 2695(11.6%) | 1391 (11.8%) | 1261 (14.5%) | 1761 (12.3%) | 1263 (12.2%) | 8371 (14%) |
* Influenza was detected by isolation in MDCK cells.
** A total of 24231 specimens were tested only for influenza A during 2009–2010 due to pandemic surge in testing capacity.
Fig 1Monthly trends and seasonality of circulating influenza viruses in India, 2009–2013.
Data is shown for Srinagar (A), Delhi (B), Dibrugarh (C), Lucknow (D),Kolkata (E), Nagpur (F), Pune (G), Chennai (H), Vellore (I), and Alappuzha (J). The left axis shows the proportion positive for influenza A/H1N1 (blue), A/H1N1pdm09 (yellow), A/H3N2 (red) and influenza B (green). The total number of influenza positives in a year were considered as 100%, and the percent positivity for each month was calculated for each year. Rainfall is shown in the background.
Fig 2The proportion of influenza virus positivity by year (2009–2013) in India.
Cumulative data on monthly distribution of influenza viruses by city was calculated (data shown is Mean± 1 SE). For this analysis, data from 2009–2010 was excluded due to the pandemic which did not follow the usual seasonality pattern. Arrow indicates proposed vaccination timing during September-October (red arrow) or April-May (yellow arrow). The latitude for the capital city of each country is shown on the top of each panel.
Fig 3Influenza virus type and subtype distribution by year and city.
The overall % positivity of types and subtypes is shown for each city. The left axis shows the percent monthly distribution of seasonal influenza A/H1 (blue); A/H3 (red), influenza B (green) and pandemic A/H1N1pdm09 (yellow) from 2009 to 2013.
Relationship between geographic location, influenza seasonality, and proposed vaccination timing.
| City, State | Latitude | Peak Seasonality | Proportion of Influenza Positive (%) | Proposed Vaccination | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| June-November | December-May | ||||
| Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir | 34°0 | Dec-Feb | 13.3 | 86.7 | Sep-Oct |
| Delhi | 28°6 | Jul-Sep | 69.7 | 30.3 | Apr-May |
| Dibrugarh, Assam | 27°5 | Jun-Jul | 73.4 | 26.6 | Apr-May |
| Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh | 26°8 | Jul-Sep | 81.6 | 18.4 | Apr-May |
| Kolkata, West Bengal | 22°6 | Jun-Jul | 68.2 | 31.8 | Apr-May |
| Nagpur, Maharashtra | 21°2 | Jul-Aug | 73.3 | 26.7 | Apr-May |
| Pune, Maharashtra | 18°5 | Jul-Aug | 61.2 | 38.8 | Apr-May |
| Alappuzha, Kerala | 9°5 | May-Jul | 70.9 | 29.1 | Apr-May |
| Chennai, Tamil Nadu | 13°1 | Nov-Dec |
|
| Sep-Oct |
| Vellore, Tamil Nadu | 12°9 | Nov-Dec |
|
| Sep-Oct |
Fig 4Peak influenza circulation based on seasons in India.
Flags show names of the city, and peaks months of influenza circulation. India map is color coded for states with proposed vaccination timing with blue color for April-May and green color used for September-October.