1 / 29

Chikungunya Fever: Re-emerging vector-borne disease

Chikungunya Fever: Re-emerging vector-borne disease. Margaret McLees, M.D., DTMH Denver Public Health January 17, 2014. Outline. Case Presentation Epidemiology Presentation Diagnosis Treatment and Prevention Implications for our Travelers. Case.

zareh
Télécharger la présentation

Chikungunya Fever: Re-emerging vector-borne disease

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chikungunya Fever:Re-emerging vector-borne disease Margaret McLees, M.D., DTMH Denver Public Health January 17, 2014

  2. Outline • Case Presentation • Epidemiology • Presentation • Diagnosis • Treatment and Prevention • Implications for our Travelers

  3. Case • 65 yo female with fevers, rash, and arthralgias • 12-day trip to Bali, Indonesia, returned 2 days prior • Day 12 developed severe arthralgias and arthritis • Sick contact: landlord found down, dx’d with viral illness • Traveled from Bali to Hong Kong • Admitted in Hong Kong for 3 days • Persistent severe arthralgias, 1 day diarrhea • Rash • Paracetamol, diclofenac, ranitidine

  4. Case, continued • Returned to Denver with ongoing rash and arthralgias, resolution of fevers • Medications: oral hormone replacement • PMH: Migraines • Social Hx: tourist activities while traveling, no bad habits, +insect bites, no animal exposures, no freshwater/saltwater exposures • Afebrile on exam • Conjunctival erythema • Facial edema and rash • Upper and lower extremity edema

  5. Case: Rash

  6. Case: Rash

  7. Case: Laboratory data • WBC 3.4, 8% bands, plt 109, AST 68 • Malaria smear negative • Electrolytes, kidney, liver function, urinalysis normal • Typhoid & paratyphoid by Widal test, Influenza A&B, Dengue IgM, Brucella abortus Ag by Weil Felix, respiratory virus panel negative • CXR: blunted right costophrenic angle, no infiltrates or consolidation

  8. Clinical diagnosis: Chikungunya Fever • Serologies sent to CDC for arboviruses likely to be present in SE Asia • Ross River virus • Dengue • Chikungunya • Japanese encephalitis virus • IgM positive to multiple viruses on acute sample • Chikungunya, Barmah Forest and Ross River Virus • Chikungunya IgM, IgG positive on convalescent samples in May

  9. Chikungunya Virus (CHIKV): Alphavirus • “That which bends up” in Swahili • Togaviridae family • Single strand RNA virus, mosquito-transmitted • New World: Fever, rash, encephalitis • Western equine encephalitis • Eastern Equine encephalitis • Old World: Fever, rash, arthralgias • Chikungunya • Ross River Virus (Oceana) • Barmah Forest Virus (AUS) • O’nyong-nyong (Africa) • Semliki Forest Virus (Africa) • Mayoro (South America) • Sindbis virus (AUS, Africa, Europe, Asia minor) www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/arbor/alphavir.htm

  10. Mosquito Transmission: Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus

  11. Transmission: Aedes mosquito • Aedes aegypti • Urban mosquito • Needs standing water for larvae • Prefers cool, dark areas for resting • Feeds through the day, most active at dawn/dusk • Eggs do not survive winter in temperate climates • Aedes albopictus: Asian Tiger Mosquito • Urban, periurban, rural habitats • Feeds through the day, most active dawn/afternoon • Eggs survive winter in temperate climates • Invasive- spreading in Europe and Americas www.cdc.gov

  12. CHIKV: Geographic Distribution As of January 6, 2014 www.cdc.gov

  13. Aedes: Geographic distribution and CHIKV imported cases Soumahoro at al EID 2010

  14. Transmission Cycle • Africa • Sylvatic transmission cycle • Maintained in non-human primates, small mammals, Aedes mosquitos • Human reservoirs during epidemics without animal reservoirs • Outbreaks usually associated with heavy rainful and increased mosquito population • Asia • Human-mosquito cycle • Urban epidemics • Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus Burt FJ et al. Lancet 2012; 379:662-71 www.cdc.gov

  15. Transmission by corneal graft • La Reunion Outbreak, Indian Ocean 2005-2007 • Implementation of screening of organ and tissue donors in 2005 • 12 of 69 asymptomatic corneal donors were viremic or IgM positive for CHIK • 4 of 12 corneas from these donors were infected with CHIK (qRT-PCR) • No correlation with systemic symptoms, viremia, or presence of anti-CHIK IgM • Mouse models showed ocular innoculation of CHIK produced systemic infection • Corneal collection and transplantation suspended Couderc et al. JID 2012

  16. Lumsden WH. Trans Roy Soc Trop Med Hyg 1955;49:33-57

  17. Clinical Findings • Incubation period 1-12 days, average 2-4 • Abrupt onset fever, myalgias, headache and photophobia • Rash: maculopapular, lasting 2-3 days • Aphthous ulcers • Vesiculobullous lesions with desquamation • Vasculitic lesions • Diarrhea, nausea vomiting may occur • Neurologic symptoms (up to 16%) • Encephalopathy, seizures, meningoencephalitis • Acute flacid paralysis • Guillan-Barre like syndrome • Rarely: myocarditis, hepatitis, nephritis, anterior uveitis, retinitis, optic neuritis Mahendradas et al. J Ophth Inflam Infec 2013; 3:35 Burt FJ et al. Lancet 2012; 379:662-71

  18. Clinical features: Day 1, 7, 25 Thiberville, SD et al. PLOS Neg Trop Dis. 2013

  19. Joint disease • Severe Arthralgias • Polyarticular, usually symmetric, small joints • Swelling but no large effusions • Some improvement in 1-2 weeks, but may persist for years • Malaysia retrospective review • Mean duration of arthralgia 3 months • 45% had arthralgias beyond 4 months • 22% with arthralgias beyond 1 year • Réunion: Persistence at 36 months • Risk increases with age >35 years old • Presence of arthralgia at 4 months was predictor of chronic disease • Mouse models suggest due to viral persistence in tissues Zim MA et al. J Clin Virol. 2013; 56:141-45. Thiberville, SD et al. PLOS Neg Trop Dis. 2013 Schilte et al. Plos Neg Trop Dis. 2013 Hawman et al. J. Virology 2013; 87:13878

  20. Diagnosis • Differential • Dengue • Ross River virus, O’nyong-nyong and other alphaviruses • Leptospirosis, malaria, group A strep, rickettsia, rubella, measles, parvovirus, enterovirus, adenovirus, rheumatologic diseases • Clinical findings, epidemiology, lab confirmation • Viral culture in 1st 3 days of illness • RT-PCR for viral RNA in 1st 8 days • Serology for IgM and IgG by end of 1st week • Convalescent titers with four-fold increase in IgG • Samples to CDC through CDPHE www.cdc.gov

  21. Treatment and Prevention • Acute Illness • Supportive care • NSAIDS • Case reports of short steroid courses for severe early disease • Persistent arthralgias: no good data for treatment • Chloroquine, hydroxychloroquine • No sig difference in efficacy for acute arthralgias between chloroquine and meloxicam in 509 indiv in India • Sulfasalazine, methotrexate, ribavirin, interferon-alpha • Mosquito avoidance • Vaccines in research, not licensed • Monoclonal antibodies as prophylaxis effective in mouse models • Mosquito avoidance on return home to prevent local transmission Chopra et al. Arthritis and Rheum 2012. Accepted Article, doi: 10.1002/art.38221 Chopra et al. Arthritis and Rheum 2008;9:2921-2 Selvarajah et al. PLoS Neg Trop Dis 2013;7:e2423 Janu et al. J. Assoc. Phys India 2011; 59:83-6

  22. CHIKV: re-emerging disease • Initial descriptions in 1950s • 2000 Epidemic in Kinshasa, DRC, 1st in 39 years • 2001-2003 epidemic in Indonesia, 1st in 20 years • 2004 Coastal Kenya • E226V mutation more efficiently transmitted by Aedes albopictus • 2005 Spread to Comoros Islands • 2005-2007 Epidemic in Réunion: 35% attack rate • 266,000 cases • 0.1% mortality • 2006 Maldives • 2008 Singapore • 2012 Rural Cambodia • 44.7% prevalence • 5.3% asymptomatic • 2012 Bhutan • 1st cases reported • Index case recent travel from India • East/Central/South African genotype • 2012 Papua New Guinea • 1st cases reported MMWR 2012; 61: 737-40 www.cdc.gov/eid 2013 vol 19

  23. CHIKV Epidemics • 2005-2006 Re-emergence in India after 32 years • 1.3 million cases in 13 states • 2007 Northern Italy: Emilia-Romagna • 254 locally acquired infections • Index case just returned from India • 2010 French Riviera: Frejús, Nice • Index case young girl with recent return from India • December 2013 Carribbean isle of St. Martin • Dec 6th: 2 cases of locally acquired chikungunya • 1st cases reported in the Americas • Dec 10th: 2 confirmed, 4 probable, 20 suspected cases of chikungunya reported to WHO www.who.int/scr/don/2013_12_10a/en/index.html; accessed 1/12/14 Tomasello et al. Travel Med and Inf Dis 2013; 11, 274-284

  24. CHIKV and US Travelers • 1995-2009: 109 lab-confirmed cases in US • Adult travelers, mean age 48 yrs • 57% female Gibney et al. CID 2011; 0:1-6

  25. CHIKV and Travelers • 1995-2009: 109 lab-confirmed cases in US • Adult travelers, mean age 48 yrs • 57% female Gibney et al. CID 2011; 0:1-6

  26. CHIKV Cases in the US Gibney et al. CID 2011; 0:1-6

  27. US Distribution of Imported CHIKV Gibney et al. CID 2011; 0:1-6

  28. Travelers from Indian Ocean Islands, 1997-2010 Savini et al., EID 2013; 19

  29. Implications for Travelers • Increased education regarding expanding geographic distribution of vectors for chikungunya (and dengue) virus, especially Europe and Caribbean • Emphasis on need for mosquito avoidance in areas that are not tropical or traditional risk areas • Prompt evaluation of return travelers with fever and awareness of CHIKV • Avoidance of mosquitos after diagnosis of chikungunya to decrease risk of local transmission

More Related