| Literature DB >> 27088272 |
Forrest K Jones, Albert I Ko, Chris Becha, Cynthia Joshua, Jennie Musto, Sarah Thomas, Axelle Ronsse, Carl D Kirkwood, Alison Sio, Audrey Aumua, Eric J Nilles.
Abstract
Flooding on 1 of the Solomon Islands precipitated a nationwide epidemic of diarrhea that spread to regions unaffected by flooding and caused >6,000 cases and 27 deaths. Rotavirus was identified in 38% of case-patients tested in the city with the most flooding. Outbreak potential related to weather reinforces the need for global rotavirus vaccination.Entities:
Keywords: Disease outbreaks; G9P[8]; Guadalcanal; Honiara; Pacific islands; Solomon Islands; Western Pacific Ocean; climate change; diarrhea; disasters; enteric infections; epidemics; floods; rotavirus; surveillance; weather
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27088272 PMCID: PMC4861519 DOI: 10.3201/eid2205.151743
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1A) Spread of diarrheal disease in Solomon Islands after a postflooding outbreak in the capital city of Honiara, 2014, that resulted from a tropical depression. Dashed arrows indicate islands not affected by flooding where diarrheal outbreaks occurred. Two remote provinces, Temotu and Renell & Bellona, that did not report outbreaks are not included. B–E) Weekly rainfall measurements and outpatient diarrhea cases identified from the Pacific Syndromic Surveillance System (PSSS) database, December 31, 2012–August 30, 2015. The flooding occurred during April 3–5 in B) Honiara and C) other parts of Guadalcanal; vertical lines in panels D and E indicate the timing of the outbreak peak in Honiara and Guadalcanal. Cases of diarrhea are from PSSS weekly counts; Good Samaritan Hospital in Guadalcanal was designated as a PSSS site immediately postflood. Outpatient clinics in Honiara were Rove Clinic, Kukum Clinic, and Mataniko Clinic. Rainfall data presented for Guadalcanal Province is from Honiara.
Comparison of diarrhea prevalence before, during, and after outbreak linked to localized flooding, Solomon Islands, 2013–2015*
| Facility† | Facility type | Location‡ | No. cases (mean weekly cases) | Rate ratio (95% CI) | ||
| 2013§ | 2014¶ | 2015# | ||||
| National Referral Hospital | Hospital | Honiara | 470 (36.2) | 1969 (140.6) | 347 (24.8) | 4.65 (3.24–6.75) |
| Kukum | Clinic | Honiara | 290 (20.7) | 675 (48.2) | 256 (18.3) | 2.47 (1.67–3.70) |
| Rove | Clinic | Honiara | 288 (20.6) | 487 (34.8) | 264 (18.9) | 1.76 (1.18–2.66) |
| Good Samaritan Hospital | Hospital | Guadalcanal | NA | 812 (116.0) | 253 (18.1) | 6.41 (4.43–9.42) |
| Kilu’ufi | Hospital | Malaita | 248 (17.7) | 627 (44.8) | 112 (8.6) | 3.36 (2.17–5.29) |
| Taro | Hospital | Choiseul | 4 (0.3) | 48 (3.4) | 31 (2.2) | 2.74 (1.18–6.71) |
| Gizo | Hospital | Western | 72 (5.1) | 427 (30.5) | 140 (10.8) | 3.88 (2.37–6.52) |
| *Source: Pacific Syndromic Surveillance System (PSSS) database. The rate ratio was calculated by comparing rates during the outbreak in 2014 and rates during years without outbreaks (2013 and 2015) and using a negative binomial regression. NA, not available. †One PSSS site in Honiara, Mataniko Clinic, is not shown because the clinic was partially destroyed by the flood and was not operational during the peak of the outbreak. ‡The city of Honiara is the capital of the Solomon Islands and is located in Guadalcanal Province; the remaining locations are provinces of the Solomon Islands. §April 8–July 14, 2013 (14 weeks). ¶April 7–July 13, 2014 (14 weeks). #April 6–July 12, 2015 (14 weeks). | ||||||
Rotavirus rapid diagnostic tests of fecal samples before and during diarrheal outbreak precipitated by localized flooding, Honiara, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands, 2013 and 2014*
| Age group | % Positive (no. positive/no. tested) | p value§ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2013† | 2014‡ | ||
| <5 y | 0 (0/12) | 41.9 (18/43) | 0.005 |
| ≥5 y | 0 (0/31) | 23.5 (4/17) | 0.012 |
| Unknown | NA | 100 (1/1) | NA |
| Total | 0 (0/43) | 37.7 (23/61) | <0.001 |
*Samples were collected and tested at the National Referral Hospital, Honiara; no rotavirus tests were conducted during the outbreak period in 2015. NA, not available. †April 8–July 14, 2013 (14 weeks). ‡April 7–July 13, 2014 (14 weeks). §By Fisher exact test.
Figure 2Nucleotide sequence–based phylogenetic tree of rotavirus viral protein (VP) 7 for isolates obtained in the Solomon Islands during an outbreak of diarrheal illness after flooding in the capital city of Honiara. Four isolates from different provinces had homologous VP7 sequences. We visually analyzed generated electropherograms and constructed contiguous DNA sequence files using the Sequencher Software program version 5.0.1 (Gene Codes Corp Inc., Ann Arbor, MI, USA). We performed nucleotide similarity searches using the BLAST (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) and compared the nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences of the VP7 gene with sequences available in GenBank possessing the entire open reading frame. We constructed multiple nucleotide and amino acid alignments using the MUSCLE algorithm in MEGA 6.0 (http://www.megasoftware.net/). Nucleotide and amino acid distance matrices were calculated by using the p-distance algorithm in MEGA 6.0. We selected the optimal evolutionary model based on the Akaike information criterion (corrected) ranking implemented in jModelTest (GitHub, Heidelberg, Germany) and generated maximum-likelihood phylogenetic trees using the nucleotide substitution model TrN+Gamma 4+I in MEGA 6.0, and assessed the robustness of branches by bootstrap analysis using 1,000 pseudoreplicate runs. Scale bar indicates base substitutions per site.