| Literature DB >> 26934531 |
Robert W Malone1,2, Jane Homan3, Michael V Callahan4, Jill Glasspool-Malone1,2, Lambodhar Damodaran5, Adriano De Bernardi Schneider5, Rebecca Zimler6, James Talton7, Ronald R Cobb7, Ivan Ruzic8, Julie Smith-Gagen9, Daniel Janies5, James Wilson10.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Reports of high rates of primary microcephaly and Guillain-Barré syndrome associated with Zika virus infection in French Polynesia and Brazil have raised concerns that the virus circulating in these regions is a rapidly developing neuropathic, teratogenic, emerging infectious public health threat. There are no licensed medical countermeasures (vaccines, therapies or preventive drugs) available for Zika virus infection and disease. The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) predicts that Zika virus will continue to spread and eventually reach all countries and territories in the Americas with endemic Aedes mosquitoes. This paper reviews the status of the Zika virus outbreak, including medical countermeasure options, with a focus on how the epidemiology, insect vectors, neuropathology, virology and immunology inform options and strategies available for medical countermeasure development and deployment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26934531 PMCID: PMC4774925 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0004530
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Countries and territories with active Zika virus transmission.
| American Samoa | Ecuador | Mexico |
| Barbados | El Salvador | Nicaragua |
| Bolivia | French Guiana | Panama |
| Brazil | Guadeloupe | Paraguay |
| Cape Verde | Guatemala | Saint Martin |
| Colombia | Guyana | Samoa |
| Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, US territory | Haiti | Suriname |
| Costa Rica | Honduras | Tonga |
| Curacao | Jamaica | U.S. Virgin Islands |
| Dominican Republic | Martinique | Venezuela |
Source: [29]. See Fig 2 for additional details. As of February 17, 2016.
Fig 2Zika virus, past and current distribution.
Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [83].
Fig 1Phylogeographic analyses illustrating the lineage of the Zika virus currently circulating in Brazil.
Phylogeographic analysis based on the envelope gene of Zika virus. This analysis illustrates the path of travel of Zika virus from Africa, Asia, and across the Pacific to South America. This analysis was created with Supramap [68]. Yellow circles and branches are associated with common ancestors. Red pins and black lines are associated with observed viral isolates. The root of the tree is indicated with a green circle. Data analyzed included all envelope variants of Zika virus available in the public domain as of January 18, 2016. Nucleotide sequence data were aligned using MAFFT v7.215 under default settings. A dataset for the envelope gene was created resulting in a matrix of 56 taxa and 753 aligned positions. A phylogenetic tree search was conducted for each dataset using RAxML v8.1.16 for 100 replicates under the GTRCAT model of nucleotide substitution. The outgroup was set to HQ234498. Supramap to project the phylogenetic tree into the earth [68].
Projection of Zika virus infections in states with laboratory confirmation of Zika virus circulation during 2015 (18 of 27 Brazilian states or federated units).
| Brazil | Estimated Zika Virus Infections | Brazil | Estimated Zika Virus Infections | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Federated unit | Lower limit | Upper Limit | Federated unit | Lower limit | Upper Limit |
| Alagoas | 4,023 | 29,066 | Paraná | 42,008 | 97,118 |
| Amazonas | 3,119 | 34,264 | Pernambuco | 34,579 | 81,303 |
| Bahia | 19,216 | 132,274 | Piauí | 3,237 | 27,875 |
| Ceará | 38,485 | 77,469 | Rio de Janeiro | 15,918 | 143,985 |
| Espírito Santo | 6,481 | 34,190 | Rio Grande do Norte | 4,761 | 29,947 |
| Maranhão | 1,481 | 60,067 | Rondônia | 2,911 | 15,383 |
| Mato Grosso | 8,202 | 28,410 | Roraima | 1,450 | 4,399 |
| Pará | 6,357 | 71,400 | São Paulo | 236,494 | 386,249 |
| Paraíba | 6,013 | 34,558 | Tocantins | 8,767 | 13,182 |
| Brazil | 443,502 | 1,301,140 | |||
The parameters utilized for this estimate were developed by employing dengue case frequencies for the inferior limit and the proportions of cases that occurred in French Polynesia for the upper limit based on the population in each state. These speculative values are an estimate of the dispersion potential of this virus, which has over 80% asymptomatic or oligosymptomatic cases (translated from Portuguese). See reference: [74].
Fig 3States in Brazil investigating microcephaly cases for association with Zika virus infection (above), and with confirmed circulation of Zika virus (below).
After [99]. Information sources include Brazilian Health Ministry (Ministério da Saúde);WHO (World Health Organization); PAHO (Pan American Health Organization).
Summary of Brazilian States (Federated units), current Zika circulation patterns, and increased incidence of primary microcephaly.
| Brazilian State | Zika Circulation | Primary microcephaly | Brazilian State | Zika Circulation | Primary microcephaly | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acre | AC | Pará | PA | + | + | ||
| Alagoas | AL | + | + | Paraíba | PB | ||
| Amapá | AP | Paraná | PR | + | |||
| Amazonas | AM | + | Pernambuco | PE | + | + | |
| Bahia | BA | + | + | Piauí | PI | + | + |
| Ceará | CE | + | + | Rio de Janeiro | RJ | + | |
| Distrito Federal | DF | + | + | Rio Grande do Norte | RN | + | + |
| Espírito Santo | ES | + | + | Rio Grande do Sul | RS | + | |
| Goiás | GO | + | Rondônia | RO | + | ||
| Maranhão | MA | + | + | Roraima | RR | + | + |
| Mato Grosso | MT | + | + | Santa Catarina | SC | ||
| Mato Grosso do Sul | MS | + | + | São Paulo | SP | + | |
| Minas Gerais | MG | + | Sergipe | SE | + | ||
| Tocantins | TO | + | + | ||||
After [99]. Information sources include Brazilian Health Ministry (Ministério da Saúde); WHO (World Health Organization); PAHO (Pan American Health Organization).
Comparison of predicted to reported cumulative case incidence distribution of primary microcephaly by federated unit (state), Brazil, 2015.
| Brazil | Reported cases | Predicted Cases | Brazil | Reported cases | Predicted Cases | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Federated unit with Zika | Lower Limit | Upper Limit | Federated unit with Zika | Lower Limit | Upper Limit | ||
| Alagoas | 149 | 32 | 78 | Paraná | No data | 334 | 262 |
| Amazonas | No data | 25 | 93 | Pernambuco | 1,236 | 275 | 220 |
| Bahia | 450 | 153 | 357 | Piauí | No data | 26 | 75 |
| Ceará | 192 | 306 | 209 | Rio de Janeiro | 122 | 127 | 386 |
| Espírito Santo | No data | 52 | 92 | Rio Grande do Norte | 181 | 38 | 81 |
| Maranhão | No data | 12 | 162 | Rondônia | No data | 23 | 42 |
| Mato Grosso | 129 | 65 | 77 | Roraima | No data | 12 | 12 |
| Pará | No data | 51 | 193 | São Paulo | No data | 1,880 | 1,043 |
| Paraíba | 569 | 48 | 93 | Tocantins | No data | 70 | 36 |
| Brazil (18 of 27 states reporting) | 3,526 | 3,515 | |||||
Table based on estimates provided by Brazilian Ministry of Health as summarized in Table 2. Numbers of predicted cases are derived by calculating predicted at-risk pregnancies (the product of average crude birth rate in Brazil between 2011–2013 of 15 births/1000 people and estimated Zika infected population in each state summarized in Table 2) and multiplying by the corresponding calculated average incidence rate estimate lower and upper limits for the country at large during 2015.