AI Article Synopsis

  • Yellow Fever virus (YFV) has re-emerged in the coastal southeastern region of Brazil after being absent for 80 years, causing 307 human cases and 105 deaths between 2016 and 2018.
  • A surveillance study conducted during the 2018-2019 transmission season identified YFV in a dying howler monkey, revealing that the virus had persisted in the area over multiple seasons without needing new introductions.
  • The research highlighted the importance of fast diagnostics and real-time surveillance, allowing health authorities to initiate preventive measures quickly to control the outbreak.

Article Abstract

Background: In Brazil, the Yellow Fever virus (YFV) is endemic in the Amazon, from where it eventually expands into epidemic waves. Coastal south-eastern (SE) Brazil, which has been a YFV-free region for eight decades, has reported a severe sylvatic outbreak since 2016. The virus spread from the north toward the south of the Rio de Janeiro (RJ) state, causing 307 human cases with 105 deaths during the 2016-2017 and 2017-2018 transmission seasons. It is unclear, however, whether the YFV would persist in the coastal Atlantic Forest of RJ during subsequent transmission seasons.

Objectives: To conduct a real-time surveillance and assess the potential persistence of YFV in the coastal Atlantic Forest of RJ during the 2018-2019 transmission season.

Methods: We combined epizootic surveillance with fast diagnostic and molecular, phylogenetic, and evolutionary analyses.

Findings: Using this integrative strategy, we detected the first evidence of YFV re-emergence in the third transmission season (2018-2019) in a dying howler monkey from the central region of the RJ state. The YFV detected in 2019 has the molecular signature associated with the current SE YFV outbreak and exhibited a close phylogenetic relationship with the YFV lineage that circulated in the same Atlantic Forest fragment during the past seasons. This lineage circulated along the coastal side of the Serra do Mar mountain chain, and its evolution seems to be mainly driven by genetic drift. The potential bridge vector Aedes albopictus was found probing on the recently dead howler monkey in the forest edge, very close to urban areas.

Main Conclusions: Collectively, our data revealed that YFV transmission persisted at the same Atlantic Forest area for at least three consecutive transmission seasons without the need of new introductions. Our real-time surveillance strategy permitted health authorities to take preventive actions within 48 h after the detection of the sick non-human primate. The local virus persistence and the proximity of the epizootic forest to urban areas reinforces the concern with regards to the risk of re-urbanisation and seasonal re-emergence of YFV, stressing the need for continuous effective surveillance and high vaccination coverage in the SE region, particularly in RJ, an important tourist location.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6489371PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0074-02760190076DOI Listing

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