| Literature DB >> 28594790 |
James D Heffelfinger, Xi Li, Nyambat Batmunkh, Varja Grabovac, Sergey Diorditsa, Jayantha B Liyanage, Sirima Pattamadilok, Sunil Bahl, Kirsten S Vannice, Terri B Hyde, Susan Y Chu, Kimberley K Fox, Susan L Hills, Anthony A Marfin.
Abstract
Japanese encephalitis (JE) virus is the most important vaccine-preventable cause of encephalitis in the Asia-Pacific region. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends integration of JE vaccination into national immunization schedules in all areas where the disease is a public health priority (1). This report updates a previous summary of JE surveillance and immunization programs in Asia and the Western Pacific in 2012 (2). Since 2012, funding for JE immunization has become available through the GAVI Alliance, three JE vaccines have been WHO-prequalified,* and an updated WHO JE vaccine position paper providing guidance on JE vaccines and vaccination strategies has been published (1). Data for this report were obtained from a survey of JE surveillance and immunization practices administered to health officials in countries with JE virus transmission risk, the 2015 WHO/United Nations Children's Fund Joint Reporting Form on Immunization, notes and reports from JE meetings held during 2014-2016, published literature, and websites. In 2016, 22 (92%) of 24 countries with JE virus transmission risk conducted JE surveillance, an increase from 18 (75%) countries in 2012, and 12 (50%) countries had a JE immunization program, compared with 11 (46%) countries in 2012. Strengthened JE surveillance, continued commitment, and adequate resources for JE vaccination should help maintain progress toward prevention and control of JE.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28594790 PMCID: PMC5720240 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6622a3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
FIGUREAreas with risk for Japanese encephalitis (JE) virus transmission and JE vaccine introduction* — 24 countries in Asia and the Western Pacific Region,, 2016
Source: World Health Organization (WHO)/Immunization Vaccines and Biologicals database; May 12, 2017.
* Singapore made a decision not to introduce JE vaccine because only rare, sporadic human cases are reported in the country.
† The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the WHO concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city, or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Dotted lines on maps represent approximate border lines for which there might not yet be full agreement.
§ JE vaccine introduction in Indonesia will be limited to Bali.
Characteristics of Japanese encephalitis (JE) surveillance in countries with JE virus transmission risk, 2016
| Country | JE surveillance program (no. sentinel sites) | Case definition used | Integration of encephalitis and meningitis surveillance | Age groups under surveillance | Laboratory confirmation of suspected cases | CSF tested* | Serum tested* |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia† | All risk areas§ | Other¶ | No | All | Yes | Most | Most |
| Bangladesh | Sentinel (4) | AMES | No | All | Yes | Most | Most |
| Bhutan | Sentinel (5) | WHO AES | No | <15 yrs | Yes | Some | Most |
| Brunei | National | WHO AES | Yes | All | Yes | No | Most |
| Burma | National | WHO AES | Yes | All | Yes | Some | Most |
| Cambodia | Sentinel (6) | AMES | No | <15 yrs | Yes | Most | Most |
| China | National and sentinel (27) | WHO AES (national); AMES (sentinel) | Yes** | All | Yes | Most | Most |
| Taiwan | All areas | Other†† | NA | All | Yes | Yes§§ | Yes§§ |
| India | All risk areas and sentinel (223) | WHO AES | No | All | Yes | Most | Most |
| Indonesia | Sentinel (34) | WHO AES | No | All | Yes | No | Most |
| Japan | National | Other¶¶ | No | All | Yes | Yes§§ | Yes§§ |
| Laos | National and sentinel (3) | AMES (national); WHO, AES, AMES (sentinel) | Yes*** | All | Yes | Most | Most |
| Malaysia | National | Other††† | No | All | Yes | Most | Most |
| Nepal | National | WHO AES | No | All | Yes | Most | Some |
| North Korea | National | AMES | Yes | <15 yrs | Yes | Yes§§§ | Yes§§§ |
| Pakistan | None | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| Papua New Guinea | Sentinel (1) | WHO AES | No | <15 yrs | Yes | Most | Most |
| Philippines | Sentinel (9) | AMES | Yes | All | Yes | Most | Most |
| Russia† | None | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| Singapore | National | WHO AES | No | All | Yes | Most | Most |
| South Korea | National | WHO AES | No | All | Yes | Most | Most |
| Sri Lanka | National | WHO AES | No | All | Yes | Most | Some |
| Thailand | National and sentinel (40) | WHO AES | No | All | Yes | Most | Most |
| Timor Leste | National | WHO AES | No | All | Yes¶¶¶ | Most | No |
| Vietnam | National and sentinel (8) | WHO AES, AMES**** | Yes†††† | All (AES); <15 yrs (AMES) | Yes | Most | Most |
Abbreviations: AMES = Acute meningoencephalitis surveillance; AES = Acute encephalitis surveillance CSF = cerebrospinal fluid; NA = not available.
* Most = country reported testing specimens from ≥50% suspected JE cases. Some = country reported testing
† JE virus transmission risk in well-defined, limited areas.
§ Torres Strait Islands and northern Cape York.
¶ Clinical evidence of non-encephalitic disease (acute febrile illness with headache, myalgia and/or rash) or encephalitic disease (e.g., focal neurologic disease, impaired level of consciousness, abnormal brain imaging study, abnormal encephalogram, and/or presence of pleocytosis in cerebrospinal fluid) plus definitive laboratory evidence of JE infection.
** Encephalitis and meningitis surveillance integrated for sentinel but not national surveillance program.
†† A clinical case was defined as a person of any age with an acute onset of fever and a change in mental status and/or a new onset of seizures (excluding simple febrile seizures) at any time of the year. A confirmed case was defined as a clinical case with a positive laboratory test specific for JE in serum, plasma, blood, CSF or tissue or that met the clinical case definition and was epidemiologically linked to a confirmed case (Chang YK, Chang HL, Wu HS, Chen KT. Epidemiological features of Japanese encephalitis in Taiwan from 2000 to 2014. Am J Trop Med Hyg 2017;382–8).
§§ Reported “Yes” but did not quantify percentage.
¶¶ Patients with encephalitis syndrome with laboratory-confirmed JE.
*** Encephalitis and meningitis surveillance integrated for national (but not sentinel) surveillance program.
††† Febrile illness with neurologic symptoms (e.g., headache, meningeal signs, stupor, disorientation, coma, tremors, general paresis, hypertonia, loss of consciousness).
§§§ Reported “Yes” but did not quantify percentage. Also, reported that laboratory has not performed a JE diagnostic test on a human sample since 2014.
¶¶¶ Testing suspended because of reagent stockouts in 2016.
**** Five sentinel sites use AES and three use AMES case definition.
†††† At AMES sites.
Characteristics of Japanese encephalitis (JE) immunization programs in countries with JE virus transmission risk, 2016
| Country | JE immunization program | Strategy | Scheduled age to begin routine immunization | Vaccine used in national program |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia* | All risk areas† | Routine | 12 mos | JE-CV |
| Bangladesh | None | — | — | — |
| Bhutan | None | — | — | — |
| Brunei | None | — | — | — |
| Cambodia | National | Routine | 9 mos | CD-JEV |
| Burma | None§ | — | — | — |
| China | National¶ | Routine | 8 mos | CD-JEV |
| Taiwan | All areas | Routine | 15 mos | MB |
| India | Subnational** | Routine | 9–11 mos | CD-JEV |
| Indonesia | None†† | — | — | — |
| Japan | National | Routine | 6 mos | VC |
| Laos | National | Routine | 9–11 mos | CD-JEV |
| Malaysia | Subnational§§ | Routine | 9 mos | JE-CV |
| Nepal | National | Routine | 12 mos | CD-JEV |
| North Korea | None¶¶ | — | — | — |
| Pakistan | None | — | — | — |
| Papua New Guinea | None | — | — | — |
| Philippines | None*** | — | — | — |
| Russia* | None | — | — | — |
| Singapore | None††† | — | — | — |
| South Korea | National | Routine | 12 mos | CD-JEV, MB, VC, |
| Sri Lanka | National | Routine | 12 mos | CD-JEV |
| Thailand | National | Routine | 12 mos | CD-JEV, JE-CV |
| Timor Leste | None | — | — | — |
| Vietnam | National | Routine | 12 mos | MB |
Abbreviations: CD-JEV = live attenuated JE vaccine; JE-CV = live recombinant JE vaccine; MB = inactivated, mouse brain-derived JE vaccine; VC = inactivated, Vero cell culture–derived JE vaccine.
* JE virus transmission risk in well-defined, limited areas.
† Vaccination recommended for residents of the outer Torres Strait Islands or nonresidents living or working there for ≥30 days during the wet season.
§ Burma is planning a national JE vaccination campaign for 2017, followed by routine introduction.
¶ Excluding the provinces of Qinghai, Tibet, and Xinjiang, which do not have endemic transmission.
** JE vaccine included in 216 districts with endemic JE.
†† Indonesia will initiate JE vaccine campaign in Bali in 2017.
§§ In Sarawak state; in peninsular Malaysia and Sabah, vaccination is provided to children aged <15 years in the vicinity of an outbreak.
¶¶ North Korea conducted a JE vaccination campaign in 2016.
*** Philippines is planning a subnational JE vaccination campaign in 2018, followed by routine introduction nationally.
††† Singapore made a decision not to introduce JE vaccine because only rare, sporadic human cases are reported in the country.