| Literature DB >> 27684329 |
Mihaela Lazar1, Emily Abernathy, Min-Hsin Chen, Joseph Icenogle, Denisa Janta, Aurora Stanescu, Adriana Pistol, Sabine Santibanez, Annette Mankertz, Judith M Hübschen, Grigore Mihaescu, Gheorghe Necula, Emilia Lupulescu.
Abstract
We describe a rubella outbreak that occurred in Romania between September 2011 and December 2012. During this period 24,627 rubella cases, 41.1% (n=10,134) of which female, were notified based on clinical criteria, and a total of 6,182 individuals were found serologically positive for IgM-specific rubella antibody. The median age of notified cases was 18 years (range: <1-65) and the most affected age group 15 to 19 years (n=16,245 cases). Of all notified cases, 24,067 cases (97.7%) reported no history of vaccination. Phylogenetic analysis of 19 sequences (739 nucleotides each), from 10 districts of the country revealed that the outbreak was caused by two distinct rubella virus strains of genotype 2B, which co-circulated with both temporal and geographical overlap. In addition to the 6,182 IgM-positive rubella cases, 28 cases of congenital rubella syndrome (CRS) were identified, including 11 neonatal deaths and one stillbirth. The outbreak underscores the need to encourage higher vaccination uptake in the population, particularly in women of reproductive age, and to strengthen epidemiological and laboratory investigations of suspected rubella cases. Genetic characterisation of wild-type rubella virus is an essential component to enhance surveillance and here we report rubella virus sequences from Romania. This article is copyright of The Authors, 2016.Entities:
Keywords: Congenital rubella syndrome; Rubella genotypes; Rubella surveillance; Rubella virus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27684329 PMCID: PMC5073198 DOI: 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2016.21.38.30345
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Euro Surveill ISSN: 1025-496X
Primer sequences for three nested reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction genotyping assays
| Nested assay set number | Primer name | Primer sequence (5’–3’) | PCR product size | Nucleotides targeted |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | RV8633F | AGCGACGCGGCCTGCTGGGG | 945 | 8,731–9,469 |
| RV9577R | CGCCCAGGTCTGCCGGGTCTC | |||
| RV8669F | GTGATGAGCGTGTTCGCCCTT | 873 | ||
| RV9541R | GTGTGTGCCATACACCACGCC | |||
| 2 | RV8812F | CAACACGCCGCACGGACAAC | 766 | 8,869–9,469 |
| RV9577R | CGCCCAGGTCTGCCGGGTCTC | |||
| RV8823F | ACGGACAACTCGAGGTCC | 727 | ||
| RV9541R | GTGTGTGCCATACACCACGCC | |||
| 3 | RV8669F-2B | GTGATGAGCGTGTTCGCCCT | 328 | 8,731–8,869 |
| RV8996R | CCACGAGCCGCGAACAGTCG | |||
| RV8691F-2B | CTAGCTACGTCCAGCACCC | 271 | ||
| RV8961R | CAAACCGGGGAGGCCCA |
PCR: polymerase chain reaction.
Figure 1Rubella incidence in Romania, 2000–2014
Figure 2Distributions of notified rubella outbreak cases, Romania, September 2011–December 2012 (n = 24,627)
Figure 3Geographical distribution of rubella serologically confirmed cases (n = 6,182)a and virus genotype, Romania, September 2011–December 2012
Figure 4Serological testing of pregnant women with clinical symptoms of rubella or exposed to rubella, Romania, September 2011–December 2012 (n=314)
Figure 5Phylogenetic analysis of sequences from rubella viral strains retrieved in Romania in 2003 and 2011–2012