| Literature DB >> 28986247 |
Yamilka Díaz1, Julio Cisneros1, Hilda Guzmán2, Paola Cordoba1, Jean-Paul Carrera1, Brechla Moreno1, Rubing Chen2, Juan Castillo Mewa3, Lourdes García4, Lizbeth Cerezo4, Amelia Travassos da Rosa2, Nathan D Gundacker5, Blas Armién6, Scott C Weaver7, Nikos Vasilakis7, Sandra López-Vergès8, Robert Tesh9.
Abstract
The circulation of the South-east Asian/American (AS/AM) dengue 2 virus (DENV-2) genotype in the Americas has been associated with a high rate of severe disease. From 1993, the year DENV was reintroduced in Panama, until 2011 there were 29 dengue-associated deaths, 17 of which occurred in 2011, the most severe outbreak with a case fatality rate (CFR) of 44% (17 deaths out of 38 severe dengue cases). During this outbreak DENV-2 was reintroduced into the country, whereas over the prior five years DENV-1 and -3 were predominant. Herein, we describe the 2011 Panama outbreak and genetically characterize the Panamanian DENV-2 strains, which were associated with severe dengue disease in Panama. Our results suggest that the DENV-2 isolates from this outbreak belonged to the AS/AM genotype sub-clade 2BI and were genetically close to viruses described in the outbreaks in Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala and Mexico from 2006-2011. Sub-clade 2BI has previously been associated with severe disease in Nicaragua during outbreaks from 2005-2007.Entities:
Keywords: DENV-2; and case fatality rate; epidemiology; outbreak; phylogenetics
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28986247 PMCID: PMC6295316 DOI: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2017.09.031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Trop ISSN: 0001-706X Impact factor: 3.112