| Literature DB >> 31969141 |
Emilie Javelle1,2, Alexandre Lesueur3, Vincent Pommier de Santi4,5, Franck de Laval5,6, Thibault Lefebvre7, Guillaume Holweck3, Guillaume André Durand8,9, Isabelle Leparc-Goffart8,9, Gaëtan Texier4,5, Fabrice Simon3,9.
Abstract
Rift Valley Fever (RVF) is an emerging zoonotic arbovirus with a complex cycle of transmission that makes difficult the prediction of its expansion. Recent outbreaks outside Africa have led to rediscover the human disease but it remains poorly known. The wide spectrum of acute and delayed manifestations with potential unfavorable outcome much complicate the management of suspected cases and prediction of morbidity and mortality during an outbreak. We reviewed literature data on bio-clinical characteristics and treatments of RVF human illness. We identified gaps in the field and provided a practical algorithm to assist clinicians in the cases assessment, determination of setting of care and prolonged follow-up.Entities:
Keywords: Algorithm; Human disease; Management; Rift Valley Fever
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31969141 PMCID: PMC6977312 DOI: 10.1186/s12941-020-0346-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Clin Microbiol Antimicrob ISSN: 1476-0711 Impact factor: 3.944
Fig. 1Literature search and study selection
Fig. 2Rift Valley Fever distribution: endemic countries and recent outbreaks since 2000
Major Rift Valley Fever outbreaks with cumulated reported human cases and confirmed deaths over the period 2000–2019 (WHO data [23])
| Outbreaks dates | Geographic distribution | Reported cases | Cumulated reported cases | Deaths confirmed | Cumulated confirmed deaths |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000–2001 | Saudi Arabia, Yemen | 886 | 886 | 123 | 123 |
| 2006–2007 | Kenya | 700 | 1586 | 158 | 281 |
| 2006–2007 | Somalia | 114 | 1700 | 51 | 332 |
| 2006–2007 | Tanzania | 264 | 1964 | 109 | 441 |
| 2007–2008 | Sudan | 747 | 2711 | 230 | 671 |
| 2008–2009 | Madagascar | 712 | 3423 | 26 | 697 |
| 2009–2011 | South Africa and Namibia | > 250 | 3673 | 26 | 723 |
| 2010 | Mauritania | 63 | 3736 | 13 | 736 |
| 2012 | Mauritania | 41 | 3777 | 18 | 754 |
| 2013–2014 | Mauritania and Senegal | 11 | 3788 | 0 | 754 |
| 2015 | Mauritania | 31 | 3819 | 8 | 762 |
| 2016–2018 | Uganda | 16 | 3835 | 7 | 769 |
| 2016 | Niger | 348 | 4183 | 33 | 802 |
| 2018 | Kenya | 26 | 4209 | 6 | 808 |
| 2019 | Mayotte | 143 | 4352 | 0 | 808 |
| 2019–…a | Sudana | 365a | 4717 | 11a | 819 |
aOngoing outbreak, provisional figures from reports as of 9th December 2019
Fig. 3Manifestations of Rift Valley Fever virus infection in humans
Characteristics and alternative diagnoses of Rift Valley Fever manifestations
| RVF manifestations | Time of onset | Frequency | Lethality | Sequelae | Differential infectious diagnoses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Influenza-like syndrome | 2 to 6 days of incubation | 50–90% of infected people | – | Prolonged asthenia | Arboviruses, influenza virus, HIV (primary infection) Malarial parasites |
| Acute hepatitis | Day 2–21 | 1–2% of symptomatic cases | High in icteric hepatitis | None | EBV, CMV, HIV, hepatitis viruses A, B, C, D, E, arboviruses (yellow fever, dengue, chikungunya) Malarial parasites |
| Hemorrhagic fever | Day 2–14 (day 2–4) | 1–25% of symptomatic cases | 25–65% | None | Hemorrhagic viral fevers, |
| Ocular signs | Day 4–20 | 0.5–15% of symptomatic cases | – | Reduced or lost vision | Measles, rubella, influenza, CMV, HSV, VZV, West Nile, chikungunya, dengue and various encephalitis viruses |
| Acute encephalitis | Day 2–10 | < 1% of symptomatic cases | 50% | Neurologic disorders | Enteroviruses, measles, mumps, rubella, influenza, rabies viruses, arboviruses (West-Nile, dengue, regional encephalitis), HIV |
| Delayed encephalitis | Day 4– 60 | 1–5% of symptomatic cases | < 50% | Neurologic disorders |
HIV human immunodeficiency virus, EBV Epstein Barr virus, CMV cytomegalovirus, HSV herpes simplex viruses, VZV varicella zoster virus
Main alternative infectious diagnoses for RVFV retinitis and their characteristics
| Retinal lesions | Absent lesions | Localisation | Vitreous lesions | Anterior lesions | Keratic lesions | Onset | Specific treatment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Measles virus | Diffuse retinal edema, small hemorrhages, exudative stellate macular lesions, attenuate vessels, optic disc edema | Retinal necrotic lesions | Diffuse | No | No | Punctuate epithelial erosions and keratitis | Few days after the skin rash or later with SSPE | No |
| Rubella virus | Chorioretinitis, RPE detachment, bullous retinal detachment | Retinal hemorrhages, vasculitis, optic disc edema | Posterior pole | Mild vitreous reaction | Mild anterior uveitis | Central epithelial keratitis | – | Topical or oral corticosteroids on bullous retinal detachment |
| Influenza virus | Retinal edema, shiny vesicular dots at the termination of a capillary, small hemorrhages, serous retinal detachment, frosted branch angiitis, neuroretinitis, optic neuritis, uveal effusion | Retinal necrotic lesions | Macular | No | Iridocyclitis | Interstitial keratitis, marginal corneal ulcers | – | Oral corticosteroids for serous retinal detachment, macular edema and frosted branch angiitis |
| Multifocal choroiditis, vasculitis, neuroretinitis, optic disc edema | Retinal necrotic lesions | Diffuse Posterior pole if neuroretinitis | Vitritis | Granulomatous or non-granulomatous anterior uveitis | Stromal keratitis | Several weeks after inoculation | Ceftriaxone Doxycycline Topical or systemic corticosteroids | |
| White retinal lesions adjacent to retinal vessels, serous retinal detachment, retinal sheathing, hemorrhages, vascular leakage or occlusions, optic disc edema, neuroretinitis, optic neuritis, choroidal involvement | Retinal scarring | Adjacent to retinal vessels | Mild to moderate vitreous reaction | No | No | – | Doxycycline Systemic corticosteroids | |
| Dengue virus | Maculopathy with macular edema, focal chorioretinitis, yellow subretinal dots, foveolitis, hemorrhages, venular sheathing, disc edema, vascular occlusion, exudative retinal detachment due to vascular leakage | – | Macular | Vitreous hemorrhages | – | – | 1 week after the onset of the fever | No |
| Chikungunya virus | Multifocal choroiditis, retinal whitening with retinal and macular edema, central retinal artery occlusion, ONH edema when optic neuritis or neuroretinitis, exudative retinal detachment | – | Posterior pole | Mild vitritis | Granulomatous or non granulomatous Anterior uveitis | Keratitis | 1 month to 1 year after diagnosis | No |
| West Nile Virus | Multifocal chorioretinitis, linear clusters of circular deep yellowish lesions, retinal hemorrhages, vascular sheathing, occlusive vasculitis, optic disc edema | – | Midzone, peripheral zone, posterior pole Along retinal nerve fibers | Mild to moderate vitritis | Anterior uveitis | No | Early, contemporary to the fever | No |
| CMV | Yellow-white areas of necrotizing retinitis, retinal hemorrhages, vascular sheathing, frosted branch angiitis, ONH edema with hemorrhages if optic neuritis | – | Perivascular distribution, central (10%) | Mild vitreous reaction | Mild anterior uveitis | No | – | Ganciclovir Foscarnet |
| HSV | Retinal edema, ARN syndrome, macular yellowish exudative plaques, flame-shaped hemorrhages, perivenous sheathing, arteriolar narrowing, disc edema, PORN syndrome | – | Macular, diffuse | Mild vitreous reaction | Anterior uveitis with iris atrophy and elevated IOP | Dendritic stromal ulcerations or disciform keratitis | – | Aciclovir |
| VZV | Focal chorioretinitis with exudates and necrotic lesions, occasional hemorrhages, sheathed vessels, central retinal vein occlusion, ONH edema when optic neuritis, ARN syndrome, PORN syndrome | – | Usually peripheral, possible macular extension | Vitritis when ARN syndrome | Anterior uveitis | Punctuate epithelial keratitis | – | Acyclovir |
| Multifocal chorioretinitis, ASPPC with large pale yellowish subretinal lesion, retinitis, vasculitis (arteritis and phlebitis which can be occlusive), exudative retinal detachment, neuroretinitis | – | Multifocal Posterior pole when ASPPC | Vitritis or vitreous reaction to chorioretinitis | Granulomatous or non- granulomatous anterior uveitis bilateral in 50% | Stromal keratitis | Several weeks after inoculation | Penicillin G Topical or systemic corticosteroids |
RPE retinal pigment epithelium, ONH optic nerve hypoplasia, ARN syndrome acute retinal necrosis, PORN syndrome progressive outer retinal necrosis, ASPPC acute syphilitic posterior placoid chorioretinopathy, CMV cytomegalovirus, HSV herpes simplex viruses, VZV varicella zoster virus, SSPE subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
Fig. 4Algorithm to assess and manage Rift Valley Fever cases during an outbreak