| Literature DB >> 28409054 |
Lei Zhou1, Ruiqi Ren1, Lei Yang2, Changjun Bao3, Jiabing Wu4, Dayan Wang5, Chao Li1, Nijuan Xiang1, Yali Wang1, Dan Li1, Haitian Sui1, Yuelong Shu5, Zijian Feng6, Qun Li1, Daxin Ni1.
Abstract
Since the first outbreak of avian influenza A(H7N9) virus in humans was identified in 2013, there have been five seasonal epidemics observed in China. An earlier start and a steep increase in the number of humans infected with H7N9 virus was observed between September and December 2016, raising great public concern in domestic and international societies. The epidemiological characteristics of the recently reported confirmed H7N9 cases were analysed. The results suggested that although more cases were reported recently, most cases in the fifth epidemic were still highly sporadically distributed without any epidemiology links; the main characteristics remained unchanged and the genetic characteristics of virus strains that were isolated in this epidemic remained similar to earlier epidemics. Interventions included live poultry market closures in several cities that reported more H7N9 cases recently.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28409054 PMCID: PMC5375094 DOI: 10.5365/WPSAR.2017.8.1.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Western Pac Surveill Response J ISSN: 2094-7321
Figure 1aGeographic distribution of human infection with H7N9 virus in China [excluding Hong Kong SAR (China), Macao SAR (China) and Taiwan, China], February 2013–December 2016
Figure 1bEpidemic curve of human infection with H7N9 virus in China [excluding Hong Kong SAR (China), Macao SAR (China) and Taiwan, China] by week, February 2013–December 2016
Figure 1cGeographic distribution of human infection with H7N9 virus in China [excluding Hong Kong SAR (China), Macao SAR (China) and Taiwan, China], September 2016–December 2016
Figure 1dEpidemic curve of human infection with H7N9 virus in China [excluding Hong Kong SAR (China), Macao SAR (China) and Taiwan, China] by day, September 2016–December 2016
Comparison of geographic distribution of human infection with H7N9 virus in the second, third, fourth and fifth epidemics*
| Sep–Dec 2016 | Sep–Dec 2015 | Sep–Dec 2014 | Sep–Dec 2013 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of reported cases | 114 | 16 | 31 | 10 |
| No. of affected provinces | 7 | 4 | 8 | 2 |
| No. of affected counties | 75 | 16 | 24 | 6 |
| No. of newly affected counties | 23 | 0 | 13 | 4 |
* The epidemic duration is defined as 1 September to 31 August in the next year. The first epidemic started on 19 February 2013, the date of the first H7N9 case illness onset. For comparison, only data of cases reported from 1 September to 31 December in each epidemic were selected.
Comparison of demographic and epidemiological characteristics of H7N9 virus infections reported by time period, 19 February 2013–31 December 2016
| Characteristics | H7N9 infections reported during Sep–Dec 2016 ( | H7N9 infections reported during Feb 2013–Aug 2016 ( |
|---|---|---|
| Median age (range), years | 55 (23–91yrs) | 57 (9 mos-91yrs) |
| Male, | 77 (68) | 533 (69) |
| 0–14 | 0 (0) | 21 (4) |
| 15–29 | 1 (1) | 27 (5) |
| 30–44 | 11 (14) | 84 (16) |
| 45–59 | 31 (40) | 159 (30) |
| 60–74 | 23 (30) | 163 (31) |
| > 75 | 11 (14) | 79 (15) |
| 0–14 | 0 (0) | 23 (10) |
| 15–29 | 0 (0) | 15 (6) |
| 30–44 | 9 (24) | 38 (16) |
| 45–59 | 17 (46) | 73 (30) |
| 60–74 | 7 (19) | 55 (23) |
| > 75 | 4 (11) | 38 (16) |
| Cities and towns | 60/97 (62) | 438/775 (57) |
| Countryside and villages | 37/97 (38) | 337/775 (43) |
| Farmer | 29 (25) | 210 (27) |
| Retiree | 23 (20) | 184 (24) |
| Person who does housework or is unemployed | 22 (19) | 91 (12) |
| Other occupations a | 40 (35) | 290 (37) |
| 87/97 (90) | 659 (85) | |
| Exposed to LPM or poultry from LPM | 72/87 (83) | 457 (69) |
| Exposed to household poultry raised in backyard or neighbour's backyard | 10/87 (11) | 163 (25) |
| Occupational exposure b | 5/87 (6) | 39 (6) |
| 87/97 (90) | 506/592 (86) | |
| Time interval, median days (IQR) | - | - |
| From onset to first visit to clinic | 2 (1–3) | 1 (0–4) |
| From onset to first hospitalization | 4 (2–5) | 4 (3–7) |
| From onset to diagnosis | 9 (6–10) | 8 (6–11) |
| From onset to start oseltamivir treatment | 5 (4–6) | 6 (4–8) |
a Other occupations include workers, cadres (persons working in government or government-affiliated institutions), business service providers, children, students, etc.
b Occupational exposure refers to a person who raises, transports, sells, slaughters live poultry or does other jobs related to live poultry for a living.