An Explosive Epidemic of DENV-3 in Cairns, Australia
Open Access
- 16 July 2013
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLOS ONE
- Vol. 8 (7), e68137
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0068137
Abstract
From November 2008-May 2009 Cairns Queensland Australia was struck by an explosive epidemic of DENV-3 that exceeded the capacity of highly skilled dengue control team to control it. We describe the environmental, virological and entomological factors associated with this outbreak to better understand the circumstances leading to its occurrence. Patient interviews, serological results and viral sequencing strongly suggest that the imported index case was infected in Kalimantan, Indonesia. A delay in notification of 27 days from importation of the index case until Queensland Health was notified of dengue transmission allowed the virus to amplify and spread unchecked through November 2008. Unseasonably warm weather, with daily mean temperatures exceeding 30°C, occurred in late November and would have shortened the extrinsic incubation period of the virus and enhanced transmission. Analysis of case movements early in the outbreak indicated that the total incubation period was as low as 9–11 days. This was supported by laboratory vector competence studies that found transmission by Aedes aegypti occurred within 5 days post exposure at 28°C. Effective vector competence rates calculated from these transmission studies indicate that early transmission contributed to the explosive dengue transmission observed in this outbreak. Collections from BG sentinel traps and double sticky ovitraps showed that large populations of the vector Ae. aegypti occurred in the transmission areas from November – December 2008. Finally, the seasonal movement of people around the Christmas holiday season enhanced the spread of DENV-3. These results suggest that a strain of DENV-3 with an unusually rapid transmission cycle was able to outpace vector control efforts, especially those reliant upon delayed action control such as lethal ovitraps.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Estimating the Magnitude and Direction of Altered Arbovirus Transmission Due to Viral PhenotypePLOS ONE, 2011
- Quantifying the Spatial Dimension of Dengue Virus Epidemic Spread within a Tropical Urban EnvironmentPLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 2010
- Unforeseen Costs of Cutting Mosquito Surveillance BudgetsPLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 2010
- Natural attenuation of dengue virus type-2 after a series of island outbreaks: A retrospective phylogenetic study of events in the South Pacific three decades agoVirology, 2010
- Exploiting mosquito sugar feeding to detect mosquito-borne pathogensProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2010
- TranslatorX: multiple alignment of nucleotide sequences guided by amino acid translationsNucleic Acids Research, 2010
- A Rapid Bootstrap Algorithm for the RAxML Web ServersSystematic Biology, 2008
- jModelTest: Phylogenetic Model AveragingMolecular Biology and Evolution, 2008
- Chikungunya virus adapts to tiger mosquito via evolutionary convergence: a sign of things to come?Virology Journal, 2008
- Superior infectivity for mosquito vectors contributes to competitive displacement among strains of dengue virusBMC Ecology, 2008