| Literature DB >> 33868410 |
Idrissa Dieng1, Maryam Diarra2, Moussa Moïse Diagne1, Martin Faye1, Marie Henriette Dior Ndione1, Yamar Ba3, Mamadou Diop2, El Hadji Ndiaye3, Paolo Marinho de Andrade Zanotto4, Boly Diop5, Mamadou Ndiaye5, Abdoulaye Bousso5, Ndongo Dia1, Mawlouth Diallo3, Aliou Barry4, Gamou Fall1, Cheikh Loucoubar2, Amadou Alpha Sall1, Ousmane Faye1, Oumar Faye1.
Abstract
Dengue virus (DENV) is the most prevalent arboviral threat worldwide. This virus belonging to genus Flavivirus, Flaviviridae family, is responsible for a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations, ranging from asymptomatic or mild febrile illness (dengue fever) to life-threatening infections (severe dengue). Many sporadic cases and outbreaks have occurred in Senegal since 1970. Nevertheless, this article describes a field investigation of suspected dengue cases, between 05 September 2017 and 17 December 2017 made possible by the deployment of a Mobile Biosafety Laboratory (MBS-Lab). Overall, 960 human sera were collected and tested in the field for the presence of viral RNA by real-time RT-PCR. Serotyping, sequencing of complete E gene, and phylogenetic analysis were also performed. Out of 960 suspected cases, 131 were confirmed dengue cases. The majority of confirmed cases were from Louga community. Serotyping revealed two serotypes, Dengue 1 (100/104; 96, 15%) and Dengue 2 (04/104; 3, 84%). Phylogenetic analysis of the sequences obtained indicated that the Dengue 1 strain was closely related to strains isolated, respectively, in Singapore (Asia) in 2013 (KX380803.1) outbreak and it cocirculated with a Dengue 2 strain closely related to strains from a Burkina Faso dengue outbreak in 2016 (KY62776.1). Our results showed the co-circulation of two dengue virus serotypes during a single outbreak in a short time period. This co-circulation highlighted the need to improve surveillance in order to prevent future potential severe dengue cases through antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE). Interestingly, it also proved the reliability and usefulness of the MBS-Lab for expedient outbreak response at the point of need, which allows early cases management.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33868410 PMCID: PMC8032538 DOI: 10.1155/2021/8817987
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Trop Med ISSN: 1687-9686
Figure 1Map showing Louga City in Northwestern Senegal. Construction of the map was done using the maptools package installed in R studio version 1.2.1335; the shapefiles were downloaded from the free domain of the Geographic Information System (http://www.diva-gis.org).
Figure 2Mobile Biosafety Laboratory (MBS-Lab) workflow. (a) View and internal organization of MBS-Lab. (b) Workflow of dengue fever outbreak investigation.
Figure 3Distribution of suspected and confirmed DENV human cases according to epidemiological weeks in Louga City, 2017.
Epidemiologic and clinical characteristics of suspected and confirmed dengue fever cases, Louga, Senegal, 2017.
| Negatives ( | Positives ( | Total ( |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 0.1492 | |||
| Median | 22 | 20 | 21 | |
| Q1, Q3 | 12, 33 | 15, 29.75 | 13, 32 | |
| Age group | < | |||
| N-Miss | 36 | 05 | 41 | |
| [0, 10] | 174 (21.9%) | 7 (5.6%) | 181 (19.7%) | |
| [10, 20] | 207 (26.1%) | 60 (47.6%) | 267 (29.1%) | |
| [20, 30] | 178 (22.4%) | 35 (27.8%) | 213 (23.2%) | |
| [30, 40] | 120 (15.1%) | 20 (15.9%) | 140 (15.2%) | |
| [40, 50] | 58 (7.3%) | 4 (3.2%) | 62 (6.7%) | |
| [50, 90] | 56 (7.1) | 0 (0.0%) | 56 (6.1%) | |
| Sex | 0.0901 | |||
| F | 452 (54.5%) | 61 (46.6%) | 513 (53.4%) | |
| M | 377 (45.5%) | 70 (53.4%) | 447 (46.6%) | |
| Arthralgia |
| |||
| No | 341 (41.1%) | 27 (20.6%) | 368 (38.3%) | |
| Yes | 488 (58.9%) | 104 (79.4%) | 592 (61.7%) | |
| Asthenia |
| |||
| No | 475 (57.3%) | 61 (46.6%) | 536 (55.8%) | |
| Yes | 354 (42.7%) | 70 (53.4%) | 424 (44.2%) | |
| Headache | 0.1101 | |||
| No | 88 (10.6%) | 8 (6.1%) | 96 (10.0%) | |
| Yes | 741 (89.4%) | 123 (93.9%) | 864 (90.0%) | |
| Retro-orbital pain | 0.1591 | |||
| No | 825 (99.5%) | 129 (98.5%) | 954 (99.4%) | |
| Yes | 4 (0.5%) | 2 (1.5%) | 6 (0.6%) | |
| Rash | 0.9611 | |||
| No | 823 (99.3%) | 130 (99.2%) | 953 (99.3%) | |
| Yes | 6 (0.7%) | 1 (0.8%) | 7 (0.7%) | |
| Myalgia |
| |||
| No | 470 (56.7%) | 59 (45%) | 529 (55.1%) | |
| Yes | 359 (43.3%) | 72 (55%) | 431 (44.9%) | |
| Outcome | 0.6581 | |||
| Died | 10 (1.2%) | 1 (0.8%) | 11 (1.1%) | |
| Living | 819 (98.8%) | 130 (99.2%) | 949 (98.9%) | |
| Symptoms-sampling delay | 0.0832 | |||
| Median | 2.000 | 1.000 | 2.000 | |
| Q1, Q3 | 1.000, 3.000 | 1.000, 2.000 | 1.000, 2.000 | |
| Medical structure | < | |||
| 15 (1.8%) | 0 (0.0%) | 15 (1.6%) | ||
| DS Dahra | 117 (14.1) | 8 (6.1%) | 125 (13%) | |
| DS Darou Mousty | 185 (22.3%) | 12 (9.2%) | 197 (20.5) | |
| DS Kebemer | 19 (2.3%) | 0 (0%) | 19 (2.0%) | |
| DS KMS | 41 (4.9%) | 4 (3.1%) | 45 (4.7%) | |
| DS Koki | 15 (1.8%) | 2 (1.5%) | 17 (1.8%) | |
| DS Linguere | 28 (3.4%) | 0 (0.0%) | 28 (2.9%) | |
| DS Louga | 380 (45.8%) | 105 (80.2%) | 485 (50.3%) | |
| DS Sakal | 29 (3.5%) | 0 (0.0%) | 29 (3.0%) |
Significant p values are indicated in bold. “1” stands for χ2-test or Fisher's exact test. “2” stands for the Kruskal–Wallis test.
Circulating serotypes of DENV among infected patients.
| Molecular diagnostic |
| 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| qRT-PCR DENV 1–4 | 131/960 (13.54) | 11.43–15.87 |
| DENV-1 | 100/104 (00) | 90.44–98.74 |
| DENV-2 | 04/104 (3.84) | 1.05–9.55 |
| DENV-3 | 00/104 (00) | NA |
| DENV-4 | 00/104 (00) | NA |
| Co-infections | 00/104 (00) | NA |
Figure 4Phylogenetic analysis of complete E gene of the Louga City outbreak isolates. The analysis was run using an alignment representing the described dengue virus serotype 1 and 2 genotypes, in addition to the Louga strains highlighted, respectively, in light blue (serotype 1) and light green (serotype 2). The maximum likelihood phylogeny applying the TIM2 + F + R8 model was generated using IQ-tree, and tree support was calculated after 1000 bootstrap replicates.