| Literature DB >> 33076287 |
Vasiliki Pogka1, Elina Horefti1, Maria Evangelidou1, Evangelia Georgia Kostaki2, Dimitrios Paraskevis2, Anastasia Flountzi3,4, Theano Georgakopoulou4, Ioanna Magaziotou4, Andreas Mentis1, Timokratis Karamitros5.
Abstract
Between May 2017 and November 2018, Greece has experienced a severe measles outbreak with a total of 3258 cases reported, after reaching its goal of eliminating measles since 2014-2015. In this study, we aimed to investigate the origin and the dispersal patterns of the measles strains that circulated in Greece during this outbreak and to identify possible transmission patterns of measles virus (MeV) in the country. Of the 832 measles suspect cases referred to the National Measles and Rubella Reference Laboratory for MeV RNA detection, 131 randomly selected positive samples, representative of the temporal and spatial distribution of the laboratory-confirmed measles cases in Greece, were processed for genotypic identification by an RT-PCR amplification of a 598 bp fragment containing the 450 bp hypervariable region of the measles virus N gene. Phylogenetic analysis was carried out by the approximate maximum likelihood method (ML) under the generalized time-reversible (GTR + cat) model. All samples analyzed were found to belong to genotype B3. Comparative analysis with other European and reference measles strains revealed three separate major clusters and other multiple viruses circulating simultaneously in Greece. They were all isolated from three main community groups, Greek-Roma children, non-minority Greek nationals and immigrants/refugees, a finding that is in accordance with what was also observed in the last two measles outbreaks in 2005-2006 and 2010-2011. Notably, for one of the three clusters, no similarity was detected with previously reported prototype strains. Our results indicate the need for a more intensive vaccination program against measles amongst minority populations and in refugee hot-spots as well as the importance of molecular surveillance as a tool for monitoring measles outbreaks.Entities:
Keywords: Greece; epidemic; measles; measles virus; outbreak; spatiotemporal
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33076287 PMCID: PMC7602502 DOI: 10.3390/v12101166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Epidemiological characteristics of the genotyped MeV patients.
| Total Number (N) | 131 |
|---|---|
| Average age (y) | 11.06 |
| Gender N (%) | |
| Male | 62 (47.3%) |
| Female | 69 (52.7%) |
| Province (N) | |
| Attica | 68 |
| Thessaly | 23 |
| Peloponnese | 18 |
| Central Macedonia | 15 |
| West Macedonia | 3 |
| East Macedonia and Thrace | 2 |
| Epirus | 1 |
| Crete | 1 |
| Nationality | |
| Afghani refugee | 1 |
| Albanian | 3 |
| Bulgarian | 1 |
| Georgian | 4 |
| Greek | 57 |
| Greek–Roma | 50 |
| Iranian | 1 |
| Iranian refugee | 1 |
| Iraqi refugee | 1 |
| Moroccan | 1 |
| Muslim Greek | 2 |
| Refugee Unknown | 1 |
| Romanian | 2 |
| Romanian Roma | 3 |
| Russian | 1 |
| Syrian refugee | 2 |
Figure 1Evolutionary relationships of measles viruses circulating in Greece with other European and named strains from measles nucleotide surveillance (MeaNS) database and WHO reference strains for genotype B3, based on the 450 nucleotides sequence encoding the 150 carboxy-terminal amino acids of the N protein (N450). Three main circulating clusters are indicated in green, red and blue triangles. Lineages sampled in 2017 and 2018 and cocirculated with the main clusters are colored in orange and purple, respectively.
Figure 2Geographic representation of the three main measles virus (MeV) clusters’ dispersal across Greece during the 2017–2018 outbreak. Colored arrows and numbers are in accordance with Figure 1 and Figure 3A. The flow is based on locations of samples isolation across time. The number of sampled sequences from each province is presented in parentheses.
Figure 3Epidemic curves of (A) the 3 main circulating clusters of the 2017–2018 MeV epidemic in Greece, broken down according to (B) origin (administrative regions of Greece) and (C) demographic characteristics of the infected individuals.