62 results on '"Fang, Li-Qun"'
Search Results
2. SARS‐CoV‐2 reinfection broadens the antibody responses and promotes the phenotypic differentiation of virus‐specific memory T cells in adolescents.
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Zhao, Xin‐Jing, Liu, Xiao‐Lin, Gu, Hong‐Jing, Liu, Ti, Li, De‐Yu, Zhang, Sheng, Wu, Jie, Du, Kai‐Ge, Tian, Shen, Chen, Jin‐Jin, Xu, Qiang, Lv, Chen‐Long, Jiang, Bao‐Gui, Wang, Hui, Kou, Zeng‐Qiang, Wang, Guo‐Lin, and Fang, Li‐Qun
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SARS-CoV-2 ,T cell differentiation ,SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant ,IMMUNOLOGIC memory ,BREAKTHROUGH infections - Abstract
The emergence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS‐CoV‐2) Omicron subvariants raises concerns regarding the effectiveness of immunity acquired from previous Omicron subvariants breakthrough infections (BTIs) or reinfections (RIs) against the current circulating Omicron subvariants. In this study, we prospectively investigate the dynamic changes of virus‐specific antibody and T cell responses among 77 adolescents following Omicron BA.2.3 BTI with or without subsequent Omicron BA.5 RI. Notably, the neutralizing antibodies (NAbs) titers against various detected SARS‐CoV‐2 variants, especially the emerging Omicron CH.1.1, XBB.1.5, XBB.1.16, EG.5.1, and JN.1 subvariants, exhibited a significant decrease along the time. A lower level of IgG and NAbs titers post‐BTI was found to be closely associated with subsequent RI. Elevated NAbs levels and shortened antigenic distances were observed following Omicron BA.5 RI. Robust T cell responses against both Omicron BA.2‐ and CH.1.1‐spike peptides were observed at each point visited. The exposure to Omicron BA.5 promoted phenotypic differentiation of virus‐specific memory T cells, even among the non‐seroconversion adolescents. Therefore, updated vaccines are needed to provide effective protection against newly emerging SARS‐CoV‐2 variants among adolescents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Mapping the distribution of sandflies and sandfly-associated pathogens in China.
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Hong, Xue-Geng, Zhu, Ying, Wang, Tao, Chen, Jin-Jin, Tang, Fang, Jiang, Rui-Ruo, Ma, Xiao-Fang, Xu, Qiang, Li, Hao, Wang, Li-Ping, Sun, Yi, Fang, Li-Qun, and Liu, Wei
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SAND flies ,MACHINE learning ,VISCERAL leishmaniasis ,WATCHFUL waiting ,CURRENT distribution - Abstract
Background: Understanding and mapping the distribution of sandflies and sandfly-associated pathogens (SAPs) is crucial for guiding the surveillance and control effort. However, their distribution and the related risk burden in China remain poorly understood. Methods: We mapped the distribution of sandflies and SAPs using literature data from 1940 to 2022. We also mapped the human visceral leishmaniasis (VL) cases using surveillance data from 2014 to 2018. The ecological drivers of 12 main sandfly species and VL were identified by applying machine learning, and their distribution and risk were predicted in three time periods (2021–2040, 2041–2060, and 2061–2080) under three scenarios of climate and socioeconomic changes. Results: In the mainland of China, a total of 47 sandfly species have been reported, with the main 12 species classified into three clusters according to their ecological niches. Additionally, 6 SAPs have been identified, which include two protozoa, two bacteria, and two viruses. The incidence risk of different VL subtypes was closely associated with the distribution risk of specific vectors. The model predictions also revealed a substantial underestimation of the current sandfly distribution and VL risk. The predicted areas affected by the 12 major species of sandflies and the high-risk areas for VL were found to be 37.9–1121.0% and 136.6% larger, respectively, than the observed range in the areas. The future global changes were projected to decrease the risk of mountain-type zoonotic VL (MT-ZVL), but anthroponotic VL (AVL) and desert-type zoonotic VL (DT-ZVL) could remain stable or slightly increase. Conclusions: Current field observations underestimate the spatial distributions of main sandfly species and VL in China. More active surveillance and field investigations are needed where high risks are predicted, especially in areas where the future risk of VL is projected to remain high or increase. Author summary: Our research provides a comprehensive understanding of the distribution of sandflies and SAPs in China. We have identified 47 sandfly species and 6 SAPs, with 12 main sandfly species forming three distinct ecological clusters. Our machine learning models predict the distribution and risk of sandfly species and VL under various climate and socioeconomic scenarios. The model predictions reveal a significant underestimation of the current sandfly distribution and VL risk. Future global changes are projected to decrease the risk of MT-ZVL, but AVL and DT-ZVL could remain stable or slightly increase. These findings underscore the need for more active surveillance and field investigations of vectors, especially where the future risk of VL is projected to remain high or increase. This study provides important theoretical support for guiding the surveillance and control of sandflies and SAPs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Epidemiological characteristics and antibody kinetics of elderly population with booster vaccination following both Omicron BA.5 and XBB waves in China.
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Zhao, Xin‐Jing, Liu, Xiao‐Lin, Liang, Yu‐Min, Zhang, Sheng, Liu, Ti, Li, Li‐Bo, Jiang, Wen‐Guo, Chen, Jin‐Jin, Xu, Qiang, Lv, Chen‐Long, Jiang, Bao‐Gui, Kou, Zeng‐Qiang, Wang, Guo‐Lin, and Fang, Li‐Qun
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SARS-CoV-2 ,SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant ,BOOSTER vaccines ,OLDER people ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
After the termination of zero‐COVID‐19 policy, the populace in China has experienced both Omicron BA.5 and XBB waves. Considering the poor antibody responses and severe outcomes observed among the elderly following infection, we conducted a longitudinal investigation to examine the epidemiological characteristics and antibody kinetics among 107 boosted elderly participants following the Omicron BA.5 and XBB waves. We observed that 96 participants (89.7%) were infected with Omicron BA.5, while 59 (55.1%) participants were infected with Omicron XBB. Notably, 52 participants (48.6%) experienced dual infections of both Omicron BA.5 and XBB. The proportion of symptomatic cases appeared to decrease following the XBB wave (18.6%) compared to that after the BA.5 wave (59.3%). Omicron BA.5 breakthrough infection induced lower neutralizing antibody titers against XBB.1.5, BA.2.86, and JN.1, while reinfection with Omicron XBB broadened the antibody responses against all measured Omicron subvariants and may alleviate the wild type‐vaccination induced immune imprinting. Boosted vaccination type and comorbidities were the significant factors associated with antibody responses. Updated vaccines based on emerging severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 variants are needed to control the Coronavirus Disease 2019 pandemic in the elderly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Projecting spatiotemporal dynamics of severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome in the mainland of China.
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Ding, Fang‐Yu, Ge, Hong‐Han, Ma, Tian, Wang, Qian, Hao, Meng‐Meng, Li, Hao, Zhang, Xiao‐Ai, Maude, Richard James, Wang, Li‐Ping, Jiang, Dong, Fang, Li‐Qun, and Liu, Wei
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EMERGING infectious diseases ,MEDICAL climatology ,THROMBOCYTOPENIA ,TICK control ,REGRESSION trees ,FEVER ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is an emerging infectious disease with increasing incidence and geographic extent. The extent to which global climate change affects the incidence of SFTS disease remains obscure. We use an integrated multi‐model, multi‐scenario framework to assess the impact of global climate change on SFTS disease in China. The spatial distribution of habitat suitability for the tick Haemaphysalis longicornis was predicted by applying a boosted regression tree model under four alternative climate change scenarios (RCP2.6, RCP4.5, RCP6.0, and RCP8.5) for the periods 2030–2039, 2050–2059, and 2080–2089. We incorporate the SFTS cases in the mainland of China from 2010 to 2019 with environmental variables and the projected distribution of H. longicornis into a generalized additive model to explore the current and future spatiotemporal dynamics of SFTS. Our results demonstrate an expanded geographic distribution of H. longicornis toward Northern and Northwestern China, showing a more pronounced change under the RCP8.5 scenario. In contrast, the environmental suitability of H. longicornis is predicted to be reduced in Central and Eastern China. The SFTS incidence in three time periods (2030–2039, 2050–2059, and 2080–2089) is predicted to be increased as compared to the 2010s in the context of various RCPs. A heterogeneous trend across provinces, however, was observed, when an increased incidence in Liaoning and Shandong provinces, while decreased incidence in Henan province is predicted. Notably, we predict possible outbreaks in Xinjiang and Yunnan in the future, where only sporadic cases have been reported previously. These findings highlight the need for tick control and population awareness of SFTS in endemic regions, and enhanced monitoring in potential risk areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Interactions among acute respiratory viruses in Beijing, Chongqing, Guangzhou, and Shanghai, China, 2009–2019.
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Madewell, Zachary J., Wang, Li‐Ping, Dean, Natalie E., Zhang, Hai‐Yang, Wang, Yi‐Fei, Zhang, Xiao‐Ai, Liu, Wei, Yang, Wei‐Zhong, Longini, Ira M., Gao, George F., Li, Zhong‐Jie, Fang, Li‐Qun, Yang, Yang, Ren, Xiang, Geng, Meng‐Jie, Wang, Xin, Jing, Huai‐Qi, Xu, Wen‐Bo, Cui, Ai‐Li, and Shen, Yu‐Juan
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RHINOVIRUSES ,RESPIRATORY syncytial virus ,INFLUENZA B virus ,CITIES & towns ,VIRUS diseases ,PARAINFLUENZA viruses ,CORONAVIRUSES - Abstract
Background: A viral infection can modify the risk to subsequent viral infections via cross‐protective immunity, increased immunopathology, or disease‐driven behavioral change. There is limited understanding of virus–virus interactions due to lack of long‐term population‐level data. Methods: Our study leverages passive surveillance data of 10 human acute respiratory viruses from Beijing, Chongqing, Guangzhou, and Shanghai collected during 2009 to 2019: influenza A and B viruses; respiratory syncytial virus A and B; human parainfluenza virus (HPIV), adenovirus, metapneumovirus (HMPV), coronavirus, bocavirus (HBoV), and rhinovirus (HRV). We used a multivariate Bayesian hierarchical model to evaluate correlations in monthly prevalence of test‐positive samples between virus pairs, adjusting for potential confounders. Results: Of 101,643 lab‐tested patients, 33,650 tested positive for any acute respiratory virus, and 4,113 were co‐infected with multiple viruses. After adjusting for intrinsic seasonality, long‐term trends and multiple comparisons, Bayesian multivariate modeling found positive correlations for HPIV/HRV in all cities and for HBoV/HRV and HBoV/HMPV in three cities. Models restricted to children further revealed statistically significant associations for another ten pairs in three of the four cities. In contrast, no consistent correlation across cities was found among adults. Most virus–virus interactions exhibited substantial spatial heterogeneity. Conclusions: There was strong evidence for interactions among common respiratory viruses in highly populated urban settings. Consistent positive interactions across multiple cities were observed in viruses known to typically infect children. Future intervention programs such as development of combination vaccines may consider spatially consistent virus–virus interactions for more effective control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Mapping global zoonotic niche and interregional transmission risk of monkeypox: a retrospective observational study.
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Sun, Yan-Qun, Chen, Jin-Jin, Liu, Mei-Chen, Zhang, Yuan-Yuan, Wang, Tao, Che, Tian-Le, Li, Ting-Ting, Liu, Yan-Ning, Teng, Ai-Ying, Wu, Bing-Zheng, Hong, Xue-Geng, Xu, Qiang, Lv, Chen-Long, Jiang, Bao-Gui, Liu, Wei, and Fang, Li-Qun
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MONKEYPOX ,WHOLE genome sequencing ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,ECOLOGICAL niche - Abstract
Background: Outbreaks of monkeypox have been ongoing in non-endemic countries since May 2022. A thorough assessment of its global zoonotic niche and potential transmission risk is lacking. Methods: We established an integrated database on global monkeypox virus (MPXV) occurrence during 1958 − 2022. Phylogenetic analysis was performed to examine the evolution of MPXV and effective reproductive number (R
t ) was estimated over time to examine the dynamic of MPXV transmissibility. The potential ecological drivers of zoonotic transmission and inter-regional transmission risks of MPXV were examined. Results: As of 24 July 2022, a total of 49 432 human patients with MPXV infections have been reported in 78 countries. Based on 525 whole genome sequences, two main clades of MPXV were formed, of which Congo Basin clade has a higher transmissibility than West African clade before the 2022-monkeypox, estimated by the overall Rt (0.81 vs. 0.56), and the latter significantly increased in the recent decade. Rt of 2022-monkeypox varied from 1.14 to 4.24 among the 15 continuously epidemic countries outside Africa, with the top three as Peru (4.24, 95% CI: 2.89–6.71), Brazil (3.45, 95% CI: 1.62–7.00) and the United States (2.44, 95% CI: 1.62–3.60). The zoonotic niche of MPXV was associated with the distributions of Graphiurus lorraineus and Graphiurus crassicaudatus, the richness of Rodentia, and four ecoclimatic indicators. Besides endemic areas in Africa, more areas of South America, the Caribbean States, and Southeast and South Asia are ecologically suitable for the occurrence of MPXV once the virus has invaded. Most of Western Europe has a high-imported risk of monkeypox from Western Africa, whereas France and the United Kingdom have a potential imported risk of Congo Basin clade MPXV from Central Africa. Eleven of the top 15 countries with a high risk of MPXV importation from the main countries of 2022-monkeypox outbreaks are located at Europe with the highest risk in Italy, Ireland and Poland. Conclusions: The suitable ecological niche for MPXV is not limited to Africa, and the transmissibility of MPXV was significantly increased during the 2022-monkeypox outbreaks. The imported risk is higher in Europe, both from endemic areas and currently epidemic countries. Future surveillance and targeted intervention programs are needed in its high-risk areas informed by updated prediction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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8. Comparative study on epidemiological and etiological characteristics of patients with acute diarrhea with febrile or non-febrile symptoms in China.
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Wang, Tao, Wang, Gang, Shan, Chun-Xi, Sun, Yan-Qun, Ren, Xiang, Yu, Lin-Jie, Wang, Yi-Fei, Lin, Sheng-Hong, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Li, Hao, Zhang, Cui-Hong, Geng, Meng-Jie, Yang, Wei-Zhong, Wang, Li-Ping, Liu, Wei, and Fang, Li-Qun
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DIARRHEA ,ROTAVIRUS diseases ,AGE groups ,SYMPTOMS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HOSPITAL care of children - Abstract
Background: Acute diarrhea with fever can potentially represent a more severe form of the disease compared to non-febrile diarrhea. This study was to investigate the epidemiological characteristics and enteric pathogen composition of febrile-diarrheal patients, and to explore factors including pathogens associated with fever by age group. Methods: A nationwide surveillance study of acute diarrheal patients of all ages was conducted in 217 sentinel hospitals from 31 provinces (autonomous regions or municipalities) in China between 2011 and 2020. Seventeen diarrhea-related pathogens, including seven viruses and ten bacteria, were investigated and their association with occurrence of fever symptoms was assessed using multivariate logistic analysis. Results: A total of 146,296 patients with acute diarrhea (18.6% with fever) were tested. Th diarrheal children below 5 years had the highest frequency of fever (24.2%), and related to significantly higher prevalence of viral enteropathogens (40.2%) as compared with other age groups (P < 0.001). Within each age group, the febrile-diarrheal patients were associated with a significantly higher prevalence of bacterial pathogens than afebrile-diarrheal patients (all P < 0.01). There was discrepancy when each pathogen was compared, i.e., nontyphoidal Salmonella (NTS) was overrepresented in febrile vs non-febrile patients of all age groups, while the febrile vs non-febrile difference for diarrheagenic Escherichia coli (DEC) was only significant for adult groups. The multivariate analysis revealed significant association between fever and infection with rotavirus A among children [odds ratio (OR) = 1.60], for DEC in adult groups (OR = 1.64), for NTS in both children (OR = 2.95) and adults (OR = 3.59). Conclusions: There are significant discrepancy of the infected enteric pathogens in patients with acute diarrhea with fever between age groups, and it is valuable for priority detection of NTS and rotavirus A in patients with children < 5 years old and NTS and DEC in adult patients. The results may be useful in identifying dominant pathogen candidates for the application of diagnostic assays and prevention control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. Prevalence and Etiological Characteristics of Norovirus Infection in China: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
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Li, Ting-Ting, Xu, Qiang, Liu, Mei-Chen, Wang, Tao, Che, Tian-Le, Teng, Ai-Ying, Lv, Chen-Long, Wang, Guo-Lin, Hong, Feng, Liu, Wei, and Fang, Li-Qun
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NOROVIRUS diseases ,SCHOOL nursing ,NURSING schools ,NOROVIRUSES ,NURSING care facilities ,PLANT nurseries - Abstract
Norovirus is a common cause of sporadic cases and outbreaks of gastroenteritis worldwide, although its prevalence and the dominant genotypes responsible for gastroenteritis outbreaks remain obscure. A systematic review was conducted on norovirus infection in China between January 2009 and March 2021. A meta-analysis and beta-binomial regression model were used to explore the epidemiological and clinical characteristics of norovirus infection and the potential factors contributing to the attack rate of the norovirus outbreaks, respectively. A total of 1132 articles with 155,865 confirmed cases were included, with a pooled positive test rate of 11.54% among 991,786 patients with acute diarrhea and a pooled attack rate of 6.73% in 500 norovirus outbreaks. GII.4 was the predominant genotype in both the etiological surveillance and outbreaks, followed by GII.3 in the etiological surveillance, and GII.17 in the outbreaks, with the proportion of recombinant genotypes increasing in recent years. A higher attack rate in the norovirus outbreaks was associated with age group (older adults), settings (nurseries, primary schools, etc.) and region (North China). The nation-wide pooled positive rate in the etiological surveillance of norovirus is lower than elsewhere in the global population, while the dominant genotypes are similar in both the etiological surveillance and the outbreak investigations. This study contributes to the understanding of norovirus infection with different genotypes in China. The prevention and control of norovirus outbreaks during the cold season should be intensified, with special attention paid to and enhanced surveillance performed in nurseries, schools and nursing homes from November to March. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Driving role of climatic and socioenvironmental factors on human brucellosis in China: machine-learning-based predictive analyses.
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Chen, Hui, Lin, Meng-Xuan, Wang, Li-Ping, Huang, Yin-Xiang, Feng, Yao, Fang, Li-Qun, Wang, Lei, Song, Hong-Bin, and Wang, Li-Gui
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BRUCELLOSIS ,BOX-Jenkins forecasting ,EXTREME weather ,ARID regions ,ZOONOSES - Abstract
Background: Brucellosis is a common zoonotic infectious disease in China. This study aimed to investigate the incidence trends of brucellosis in China, construct an optimal prediction model, and analyze the driving role of climatic factors for human brucellosis. Methods: Using brucellosis incidence, and the socioeconomic and climatic data for 2014–2020 in China, we performed spatiotemporal analyses and calculated correlations with brucellosis incidence in China, developed and compared a series of regression and Seasonal Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average X (SARIMAX) models for brucellosis prediction based on socioeconomic and climatic data, and analyzed the relationship between extreme weather conditions and brucellosis incidence using copula models. Results: In total, 327,456 brucellosis cases were reported in China in 2014–2020 (monthly average of 3898 cases). The incidence of brucellosis was distinctly seasonal, with a high incidence in spring and summer and an average annual peak in May. The incidence rate was highest in the northern regions' arid and continental climatic zones (1.88 and 0.47 per million people, respectively) and lowest in the tropics (0.003 per million people). The incidence of brucellosis showed opposite trends of decrease and increase in northern and southern China, respectively, with an overall severe epidemic in northern China. Most regression models using socioeconomic and climatic data cannot predict brucellosis incidence. The SARIMAX model was suitable for brucellosis prediction. There were significant negative correlations between the proportion of extreme weather values for both high sunshine and high humidity and the incidence of brucellosis as follows: high sunshine, r = −0.59 and −0.69 in arid and temperate zones; high humidity, r = −0.62, −0.64, and −0.65 in arid, temperate, and tropical zones. Conclusions: Significant seasonal and climatic zone differences were observed for brucellosis incidence in China. Sunlight, humidity, and wind speed significantly influenced brucellosis. The SARIMAX model performed better for brucellosis prediction than did the regression model. Notably, high sunshine and humidity values in extreme weather conditions negatively affect brucellosis. Brucellosis should be managed according to the "One Health" concept. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Prevalence of human infection with respiratory adenovirus in China: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Liu, Mei-Chen, Xu, Qiang, Li, Ting-Ting, Wang, Tao, Jiang, Bao-Gui, Lv, Chen-Long, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Liu, Wei, and Fang, Li-Qun
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ADENOVIRUS diseases ,RESPIRATORY infections ,MILITARY camps ,ADENOVIRUSES ,SYMPTOMS ,MILITARY education - Abstract
Background: Human adenovirus (HAdV) is a major pathogen that causes acute respiratory tract infections (ARTI) and is frequently associated with outbreaks. The HAdV prevalence and the predominant types responsible for ARTI outbreaks remains obscure in China. Methods: A systematic review was performed to retrieve literature that reported outbreaks or etiological surveillance of HAdV among ARTI patients in China from 2009 to 2020. Patient information was extracted from the literature to explore the epidemiological characteristics and clinical manifestations of the infection of various HAdV types. The study is registered with PROSPERO, CRD42022303015. Results: A total of 950 articles (91 about outbreaks and 859 about etiological surveillance) meeting the selection criteria were included. Predominant HAdV types from etiological surveillance studies differed from those in outbreak events. Among 859 hospital-based etiological surveillance studies, positive detection rates of HAdV-3 (32.73%) and HAdV-7 (27.48%) were significantly higher than other virus types. While nearly half (45.71%) of outbreaks were caused by HAdV-7 with an overall attack rate of 22.32% among the 70 outbreaks for which the HAdVs were typed by the meta-analysis. Military camp and school were main outbreak settings with significantly different seasonal pattern and attack rate, where HAdV-55 and HAdV-7 were identified as the leading type, respectively. Clinical manifestations mainly depended on the HAdV types and patient's age. HAdV-55 infection tends to develop into pneumonia with poorer prognosis, especially in children <5 years old. Conclusions: This study improves the understanding of epidemiological and clinical features of HAdV infections and outbreaks with different virus types, and helps to inform future surveillance and control efforts in different settings. Author summary: In this systematic review, we made an exhaustive search of published literature that reported outbreaks or etiological surveillance of HAdV among ARTI patients in China from 2009 to 2020. A total of 950 studies were included in this study, and we explored the epidemiological characteristics and clinical manifestations of the infection of various HAdV types. Positive detection rates of HAdV-3 (32.73%) and HAdV-7 (27.48%) were significantly higher than other virus types according to the hospital-based etiological surveillance studies. Nearly half (45.71%) of outbreaks were caused by HAdV-7 with an overall attack rate of 22.32% among the 70 outbreaks for which the HAdVs were typed by the meta-analysis. Military camp and school were main outbreak settings with significantly different seasonal pattern and attack rate, where HAdV-55 and HAdV-7 were identified as the leading type, respectively. Clinical manifestations mainly depended on the HAdV types and patient's age. HAdV-55 infection tends to develop into pneumonia with poorer prognosis, especially in children <5 years old. This study will help improve the epidemiological and clinical understanding of different HAdV types of human infections and thus will promote the targeted surveillance and measures to control and prevent HAdV infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. Zoonotic pathogens identified in rodents and shrews from four provinces, China, 2015–2022.
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Tian, Shen, Jiang, Bao-Gui, Liu, Wan-Shuang, Chen, Hao-Rong, Gao, Zi-Hou, Pu, En-Nian, Li, Yu-Qiong, Chen, Jin-Jin, Fang, Li-Qun, Wang, Guo-Lin, Du, Chun-Hong, and Wei, Yue-Hong
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Rodents and shrews are major reservoirs of various pathogens that are related to zoonotic infectious diseases. The purpose of this study was to investigate co-infections of zoonotic pathogens in rodents and shrews trapped in four provinces of China. We sampled different rodent and shrew communities within and around human settlements in four provinces of China and characterised several important zoonotic viral, bacterial, and parasitic pathogens by PCR methods and phylogenetic analysis. A total of 864 rodents and shrews belonging to 24 and 13 species from RODENTIA and EULIPOTYPHLA orders were captured, respectively. For viral pathogens, two species of hantavirus (Hantaan orthohantavirus and Caobang orthohantavirus) were identified in 3.47% of rodents and shrews. The overall prevalence of Bartonella spp. Anaplasmataceae, Babesia spp. Leptospira spp. Spotted fever group Rickettsiae, Borrelia spp. and Coxiella burnetii were 31.25%, 8.91%, 4.17%, 3.94%, 3.59%, 3.47%, and 0.58%, respectively. Furthermore, the highest co-infection status of three pathogens was observed among Bartonella spp. Leptospira spp. and Anaplasmataceae with a co-infection rate of 0.46%. Our results suggested that species distribution and co-infections of zoonotic pathogens were prevalent in rodents and shrews, highlighting the necessity of active surveillance for zoonotic pathogens in wild mammals in wider regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. Molecular detection and identification of relapsing fever Borrelia in ticks and wild small mammals in China.
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Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Tian, Feng, Li, Yue, Zhang, Xiao-Long, Jiang, Bao-Gui, Liu, Bao-Cheng, Zhang, Jing-Tao, Tian, Shen, Ding, Heng, Li, Shuang, Li, Hao, Fang, Li-Qun, and Liu, Wei
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- 2022
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14. Mapping the risk distribution of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato in China from 1986 to 2020: a geospatial modelling analysis.
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Che, Tian-Le, Jiang, Bao-Gui, Xu, Qiang, Zhang, Yu-Qi, Lv, Chen-Long, Chen, Jin-Jin, Tian, Ying-Jie, Yang, Yang, Hay, Simon I., Liu, Wei, and Fang, Li-Qun
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- 2022
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15. The imported infections among foreign travelers in China: an observational study.
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Xu, Qiang, Li, Zhi-Wei, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Liu, Meng-Yang, Wang, Jin-Long, Zhang, Hai-Yang, Wang, Li-Ping, Guo, Xiu-Hua, Fang, Li-Qun, and Liu, Wei
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INTERNATIONAL visitors ,INFLUENZA ,VECTOR-borne diseases ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,LYME disease ,REPORTING of diseases - Abstract
Background: In the past few decades, globalization has rendered more frequent and intensive population movement between countries, which has changed the original disease spectrum and brought a huge health impact on the global population including China. This study aims to describe the spectrum and epidemiological characteristics of imported infections among foreign travelers travelling to China.Methods: The data on imported infections among foreign travelers were obtained from Custom Inbound Screening System (CISS) and the National Notifiable Infectious Disease Reporting System (NNIDRS). All the infections were classified into respiratory, gastrointestinal, vector-borne, blood/sex-transmitted and mucocutaneous diseases, of which case numbers and incidences were calculated and the proportions were compared among subgroups.Results: In total, 17,189 travelers diagnosed with 58 imported infectious diseases were reported from 2014 to 2018, with an overall incidence of 122.59 per million. Respiratory infection (7,351 cases, mainly influenza) and blood/sex-transmitted diseases (6,114 cases mainly Hepatitis B and HIV infection) were the most frequently diagnosed diseases, followed by vector-borne infections (3,128 cases, mainly dengue fever and malaria). The highest case number was from Asia and Europe, while the highest incidence rate was from Africa (296.00 per million). When specific diagnosis was compared, both the highest absolute case number and incidence were observed for influenza. An obvious seasonal pattern was observed for vector-borne diseases, with the annual epidemic spanning from July to November. The origin-destination matrices disclosed the movement of imported infection followed specific routes.Conclusions: Our study provided a profile of infectious diseases among foreign travelers travelling to China and pinpointed the target regions, seasons and populations for prevention and control, to attain an informed control of imported infections in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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16. A global dataset of microbial community in ticks from metagenome study.
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Liu, Mei-Chen, Zhang, Jing-Tao, Chen, Jin-Jin, Zhu, Ying, Fu, Bo-Kang, Hu, Zhen-Yu, Fang, Li-Qun, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, and Liu, Wei
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TICKS ,TICK-borne diseases ,NUCLEOTIDE sequencing - Abstract
Ticks are important vectors of various zoonotic pathogens that can infect animals and humans, and most documented tick-borne pathogens have a strong bias towards microorganisms with strong disease phenotypes. The recent development of next-generation sequencing (NGS) has enabled the study of microbial communities, referred to as microbiome. Herein, we undertake a systematic review of published literature to build a comprehensive global dataset of microbiome determined by NGS in field-collected ticks. The dataset comprised 4418 records from 76 literature involving geo-referenced occurrences for 46 species of ticks and 219 microorganism families, revealing a total of 83 emerging viruses identified from 24 tick species belonging to 6 tick genera since 1980. The viral, bacterial and eukaryotic composition was compared regarding the tick species, their live stage and types of the specimens, or the geographic location. The data can assist the further investigation of ecological, biogeographical and epidemiological features of the tick-borne disease. Measurement(s) microbial community Technology Type(s) Next Generation Sequencing Factor Type(s) tick Sample Characteristic - Organism tick Sample Characteristic - Environment microbial community Sample Characteristic - Location Whole world [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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17. Ecology of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, 2012–2020: A machine learning modelling analysis.
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Zhang, An‐Ran, Li, Xin‐Lou, Wang, Tao, Liu, Kun, Liu, Ming‐Jin, Zhang, Wen‐Hui, Zhao, Guo‐Ping, Chen, Jin‐Jin, Zhang, Xiao‐Ai, Miao, Dong, Ma, Wei, Fang, Li‐Qun, Yang, Yang, and Liu, Wei
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MERS coronavirus ,COVID-19 ,MACHINE learning ,MIDDLE East respiratory syndrome ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,ECOLOGICAL niche - Abstract
The ongoing enzootic circulation of the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS‐CoV) in the Middle East and North Africa is increasingly raising the concern about the possibility of its recombination with other human‐adapted coronaviruses, particularly the pandemic SARS‐CoV‐2. We aim to provide an updated picture about ecological niches of MERS‐CoV and associated socio‐environmental drivers. Based on 356 confirmed MERS cases with animal contact reported to the WHO and 63 records of animal infections collected from the literature as of 30 May 2020, we assessed ecological niches of MERS‐CoV using an ensemble model integrating three machine learning algorithms. With a high predictive accuracy (area under receiver operating characteristic curve = 91.66% in test data), the ensemble model estimated that ecologically suitable areas span over the Middle East, South Asia and the whole North Africa, much wider than the range of reported locally infected MERS cases and test‐positive animal samples. Ecological suitability for MERS‐CoV was significantly associated with high levels of bareland coverage (relative contribution = 30.06%), population density (7.28%), average temperature (6.48%) and camel density (6.20%). Future surveillance and intervention programs should target the high‐risk populations and regions informed by updated quantitative analyses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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18. Decline of onset-to-diagnosis interval and its impacts on clinical outcome of COVID-19 in China: a nation-wide observational study.
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Lu, Qing-Bin, Che, Tian-Le, Wang, Li-Ping, Zhang, An-Ran, Ren, Xiang, Wang, Tao, Geng, Meng-Jie, Wang, Yi-Fei, Liu, Meng-Yang, Zhang, Hai-Yang, Fang, Li-Qun, Liu, Wei, and Li, Zhong-Jie
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COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
Background: To quantitatively assess the impact of the onset-to-diagnosis interval (ODI) on severity and death for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients.Methods: This retrospective study was conducted based on the data on COVID-19 cases of China over the age of 40 years reported through China's National Notifiable Infectious Disease Surveillance System from February 5, 2020 to October 8, 2020. The impacts of ODI on severe rate (SR) and case fatality rate (CFR) were evaluated at individual and population levels, which was further disaggregated by sex, age and geographic origin.Results: As the rapid decline of ODI from around 40 days in early January to < 3 days in early March, both CFR and SR of COVID-19 largely dropped below 5% in China. After adjusting for age, sex, and region, an effect of ODI on SR was observed with the highest OR of 2.95 (95% CI 2.37‒3.66) at Day 10-11 and attributable fraction (AF) of 29.1% (95% CI 22.2‒36.1%) at Day 8-9. However, little effect of ODI on CFR was observed. Moreover, discrepancy of effect magnitude was found, showing a greater effect from ODI on SR among patients of male sex, younger age, and those cases in Wuhan.Conclusion: The ODI was significantly associated with the severity of COVID-19, highlighting the importance of timely diagnosis, especially for patients who were confirmed to gain increased benefit from early diagnosis to some extent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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19. Mapping the viruses belonging to the order Bunyavirales in China.
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Teng, Ai-Ying, Che, Tian-Le, Zhang, An-Ran, Zhang, Yuan-Yuan, Xu, Qiang, Wang, Tao, Sun, Yan-Qun, Jiang, Bao-Gui, Lv, Chen-Long, Chen, Jin-Jin, Wang, Li-Ping, Hay, Simon I., Liu, Wei, and Fang, Li-Qun
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RIFT Valley fever ,HEMORRHAGIC fever ,REGRESSION trees ,HYALOMMA - Abstract
Background: Viral pathogens belonging to the order Bunyavirales pose a continuous background threat to global health, but the fact remains that they are usually neglected and their distribution is still ambiguously known. We aim to map the geographical distribution of Bunyavirales viruses and assess the environmental suitability and transmission risk of major Bunyavirales viruses in China. Methods: We assembled data on all Bunyavirales viruses detected in humans, animals and vectors from multiple sources, to update distribution maps of them across China. In addition, we predicted environmental suitability at the 10 km × 10 km pixel level by applying boosted regression tree models for two important Bunyavirales viruses, including Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) and Rift Valley fever virus (RVFV). Based on model-projected risks and air travel volume, the imported risk of RVFV was also estimated from its endemic areas to the cities in China. Results: Here we mapped all 89 species of Bunyavirales viruses in China from January 1951 to June 2021. Nineteen viruses were shown to infect humans, including ten species first reported as human infections. A total of 447,848 cases infected with Bunyavirales viruses were reported, and hantaviruses, Dabie bandavirus and Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) had the severest disease burden. Model-predicted maps showed that Xinjiang and southwestern Yunnan had the highest environmental suitability for CCHFV occurrence, mainly related to Hyalomma asiaticum presence, while southern China had the highest environmental suitability for Rift Valley fever virus (RVFV) transmission all year round, mainly driven by livestock density, mean precipitation in the previous month. We further identified three cities including Guangzhou, Beijing and Shanghai, with the highest imported risk of RVFV potentially from Egypt, South Africa, Saudi Arabia and Kenya. Conclusions: A variety of Bunyavirales viruses are widely distributed in China, and the two major neglected Bunyavirales viruses including CCHFV and RVFV, both have the potential for outbreaks in local areas of China. Our study can help to promote the understanding of risk distribution and disease burden of Bunyavirales viruses in China, and the risk maps of CCHFV and RVFV occurrence are crucial to the targeted surveillance and control, especially in seasons and locations at high risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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20. Broad Impacts of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Pandemic on Acute Respiratory Infections in China: An Observational Study.
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Li, Zhong Jie, Yu, Lin Jie, Zhang, Hai Yang, Shan, Chun Xi, Lu, Qing Bin, Zhang, Xiao Ai, Ren, Xiang, Zhang, Cui Hong, Wang, Yi Fei, Lin, Sheng Hong, Xu, Qiang, Jiang, Bao Gui, Jiang, Tao, Lv, Chen Long, Chen, Jin Jin, Gao, George F, Yang, Wei Zhong, Wang, Li Ping, Yang, Yang, and Fang, Li Qun
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SCIENTIFIC observation ,RESPIRATORY infections ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DIAGNOSTIC errors ,ACUTE diseases ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MICROBIAL sensitivity tests - Abstract
Background To combat the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, nonpharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) were implemented worldwide, which impacted a broad spectrum of acute respiratory infections (ARIs). Methods Etiologically diagnostic data from 142 559 cases with ARIs, who were tested for 8 viral pathogens (influenza virus [IFV], respiratory syncytial virus [RSV], human parainfluenza virus [HPIV], human adenovirus [HAdV], human metapneumovirus [HMPV], human coronavirus [HCoV], human bocavirus [HBoV], and human rhinovirus [HRV]) between 2012 and 2021, were analyzed to assess the changes in respiratory infections in China during the first COVID-19 pandemic year compared with pre-pandemic years. Results Test-positive rates of all respiratory viruses decreased during 2020, compared to the average levels during 2012–2019, with changes ranging from −17.2% for RSV to −87.6% for IFV. Sharp decreases mostly occurred between February and August when massive NPIs remained active, although HRV rebounded to the historical level during the summer. While IFV and HMPV were consistently suppressed year-round, RSV, HPIV, HCoV, HRV, and HBoV resurged and went beyond historical levels during September 2020–January 2021, after NPIs were largely relaxed and schools reopened. Resurgence was more prominent among children <18 years and in northern China. These observations remain valid after accounting for seasonality and long-term trend of each virus. Conclusions Activities of respiratory viral infections were reduced substantially in the early phases of the COVID-19 pandemic, and massive NPIs were likely the main driver. Lifting of NPIs can lead to resurgence of viral infections, particularly in children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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21. A dataset of diversity and distribution of rodents and shrews in China.
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Chen, Jin-Jin, Xu, Qiang, Wang, Tao, Meng, Fan-Fei, Li, Zhi-Wei, Fang, Li-Qun, and Liu, Wei
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SHREWS ,RODENTS ,REFERENCE books ,LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
The rodents and shrews are important reservoirs for a large number of zoonotic pathogens. Here by performing a literature review, we determined the occurrence and distribution of rodents and shrews in China at three scales including province, city, and county levels. The peer-reviewed papers published in English and Chinese were collected, standard procedures were applied in reference books, field surveys and websites to remove duplicates, and information on recorded locations of rodents and shrews was extracted. The dataset contains 13,911 records of geo-referenced occurrences for 364 rodents and shrews distributed over 1,663 locations distinguished. As pathogens continue to emerge from rodents and shrews, this dataset could assist efforts to put preliminary bounds around a variety of spatial analyses of rodents and shrews, facilitate a better understanding of the transmission risk of the pathogens they carry, and be helpful for assessing the risk of future emergence of rodent-borne zoonoses. Measurement(s) diversity and distribution of rodents and shrews Technology Type(s) literature review Factor Type(s) diversity and distribution Sample Characteristic - Organism rodents • shrews Sample Characteristic - Environment diversity • distribution Sample Characteristic - Location China [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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22. A dataset of diversity and distribution of rodents and shrews in China.
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Chen, Jin-Jin, Xu, Qiang, Wang, Tao, Meng, Fan-Fei, Li, Zhi-Wei, Fang, Li-Qun, and Liu, Wei
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SHREWS ,RODENTS ,REFERENCE books ,LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
The rodents and shrews are important reservoirs for a large number of zoonotic pathogens. Here by performing a literature review, we determined the occurrence and distribution of rodents and shrews in China at three scales including province, city, and county levels. The peer-reviewed papers published in English and Chinese were collected, standard procedures were applied in reference books, field surveys and websites to remove duplicates, and information on recorded locations of rodents and shrews was extracted. The dataset contains 13,911 records of geo-referenced occurrences for 364 rodents and shrews distributed over 1,663 locations distinguished. As pathogens continue to emerge from rodents and shrews, this dataset could assist efforts to put preliminary bounds around a variety of spatial analyses of rodents and shrews, facilitate a better understanding of the transmission risk of the pathogens they carry, and be helpful for assessing the risk of future emergence of rodent-borne zoonoses. Measurement(s) diversity and distribution of rodents and shrews Technology Type(s) literature review Factor Type(s) diversity and distribution Sample Characteristic - Organism rodents • shrews Sample Characteristic - Environment diversity • distribution Sample Characteristic - Location China [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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23. Clinical characteristics and risk factors for severe scrub typhus in pediatric and elderly patients.
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Guan, Xiu-Gang, Wei, Yue-Hong, Jiang, Bao-Gui, Zhou, Shi-Xia, Zhang, An-Ran, Lu, Qing-Bin, Zhou, Zi-Wei, Chen, Jin-Jin, Zhang, Hai-Yang, Ji, Yang, Yang, Yang, Fang, Li-Qun, Li, Hao, Yang, Zhi-Cong, and Liu, Wei
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TSUTSUGAMUSHI disease ,CHILD patients ,OLDER patients ,MEDICAL personnel ,DISEASE risk factors ,AGE groups - Abstract
Background: Scrub typhus (ST) is a life-threatening infectious disease if appropriate treatment is unavailable. Large discrepancy of clinical severity of ST patients was reported among age groups, and the underlying risk factors for severe disease are unclear. Methods: Clinical and epidemiological data of ST patients were collected in 55 surveillance hospitals located in Guangzhou City, China, from 2012 to 2018. Severe prognosis and related factors were determined and compared between pediatric and elderly patients. Results: A total of 2,074 ST patients including 209 pediatric patients and 1,865 elderly patients were included, with a comparable disease severity rate of 11.0% (95% CI 7.1%–16.1%) and 10.3% (95% CI 9.0%–11.8%). Different frequencies of clinical characteristics including lymphadenopathy, skin rash, enlarged tonsils, etc. were observed between pediatric and elderly patients. Presence of peripheral edema and decreased hemoglobin were the most important predictors of severe illness in pediatric patients with adjusted ORs by 38.99 (9.96–152.67, p<0.001) and 13.22 (1.54–113.50, p = 0.019), respectively, while presence of dyspnea and increased total bilirubin were the potential determinants of severe disease in elderly patients with adjusted ORs by 11.69 (7.33–18.64, p<0.001) and 3.17 (1.97–5.11, p<0.001), respectively. Compared with pediatric patients, elderly patients were more likely to receive doxycycline (64.8% v.s 9.9%, p<0.001), while less likely to receive azithromycin therapy (5.0% v.s 41.1%, p<0.001). Conclusion: The disease severity rate is comparable between pediatric and elderly ST patients, while different clinical features and laboratory indicators were associated with development of severe complications for pediatric and elderly patients, which is helpful for diagnosis and progress assessment of disease for ST patients. Author summary: The study investigated different clinical features and risk factors for severe disease between pediatric and elderly patients with scrub typhus. We found that significantly higher frequencies of lymphadenopathy, skin rash, enlarged tonsils, etc. were observed in pediatric patients than elderly patients. Other non-specific signs, subjective complaints, and chest radiographic abnormality were overpresented in elderly patients. Risk factors for severe disease between pediatric and elderly patients with scrub typhus were different. Presence of peripheral edema and decreased hemoglobin were the most important factors for pediatric patients, while presence of dyspnea and increased total bilirubin for elderly patients. These findings reminded medical workers to acknowledge this important difference and to adopt an age specific method in the differential diagnosis and risk assessment for scrub typhus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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24. Mapping the Distributions of Mosquitoes and Mosquito-Borne Arboviruses in China.
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Wang, Tao, Fan, Zheng-Wei, Ji, Yang, Chen, Jin-Jin, Zhao, Guo-Ping, Zhang, Wen-Hui, Zhang, Hai-Yang, Jiang, Bao-Gui, Xu, Qiang, Lv, Chen-Long, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Li, Hao, Yang, Yang, Fang, Li-Qun, and Liu, Wei
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CULEX quinquefasciatus ,ARBOVIRUSES ,MOSQUITOES ,AEDES aegypti ,SEASONAL temperature variations ,CULEX ,ANOPHELES - Abstract
The geographic expansion of mosquitos is associated with a rising frequency of outbreaks of mosquito-borne diseases (MBD) worldwide. We collected occurrence locations and times of mosquito species, mosquito-borne arboviruses, and MBDs in the mainland of China in 1954−2020. We mapped the spatial distributions of mosquitoes and arboviruses at the county level, and we used machine learning algorithms to assess contributions of ecoclimatic, socioenvironmental, and biological factors to the spatial distributions of 26 predominant mosquito species and two MBDs associated with high disease burden. Altogether, 339 mosquito species and 35 arboviruses were mapped at the county level. Culex tritaeniorhynchus is found to harbor the highest variety of arboviruses (19 species), followed by Anopheles sinensis (11) and Culex pipiens quinquefasciatus (9). Temperature seasonality, annual precipitation, and mammalian richness were the three most important contributors to the spatial distributions of most of the 26 predominant mosquito species. The model-predicted suitable habitats are 60–664% larger in size than what have been observed, indicating the possibility of severe under-detection. The spatial distribution of major mosquito species in China is likely to be under-estimated by current field observations. More active surveillance is needed to investigate the mosquito species in specific areas where investigation is missing but model-predicted probability is high. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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25. Prolonged viral shedding of SARS-CoV-2 and related factors in symptomatic COVID-19 patients: a prospective study.
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Long, Hui, Zhao, Jing, Zeng, Hao-Long, Lu, Qing-Bin, Fang, Li-Qun, Wang, Qiang, Wu, Qing-Ming, and Liu, Wei
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COVID-19 ,VIRAL shedding ,SARS-CoV-2 ,REVERSE transcriptase ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: The temporal relationship between SARS-CoV-2 and antibody production and clinical progression remained obscure. The aim of this study was to describe the viral kinetics of symptomatic patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection and identify factors that might contribute to prolonged viral shedding.Methods: Symptomatic COVID-19 patients were enrolled in two hospitals in Wuhan, China, from whom the respiratory samples were collected and measured for viral loads consecutively by reverse transcriptase quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) assay. The viral shedding pattern was delineated in relate to the epidemiologic and clinical information.Results: Totally 2726 respiratory samples collected from 703 patients were quantified. The SARS-CoV-2 viral loads were at the highest level during the initial stage after symptom onset, which subsequently declined with time. The median time to SARS-CoV-2 negativity of nasopharyngeal test was 28 days, significantly longer in patients with older age (> 60 years old), female gender and those having longer interval from symptom onset to hospital admission (> 10 days). The multivariate Cox regression model revealed significant effect from older age (HR 0.73, 95% CI 0.55-0.96), female gender (HR 0.72, 95% CI 0.55-0.96) and longer interval from symptom onset to admission (HR 0.44, 95% CI 0.33-0.59) on longer time to SARS-CoV-2 negativity. The IgM antibody titer was significantly higher in the low viral loads group at 41-60 days after symptom onset. At the population level, the average viral loads were higher in early than in late outbreak periods.Conclusions: The prolonged viral shedding of SARS-CoV-2 was observed in COVID-19 patients, particularly in older, female and those with longer interval from symptom onset to admission. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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26. Epidemiological features of COVID-19 patients with prolonged incubation period and its implications for controlling the epidemics in China.
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Zhang, Zhi-Jie, Che, Tian-Le, Wang, Tao, Zhao, Han, Hong, Jie, Su, Qing, Zhang, Hai-Yang, Zhou, Shi-Xia, Teng, Ai-Ying, Zhang, Yuan-Yuan, Yang, Yang, Fang, Li-Qun, and Liu, Wei
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EPIDEMIOLOGY ,CORONAVIRUS diseases ,EPIDEMICS ,MEDICAL practice - Abstract
Background: COVID-19 patients with long incubation period were reported in clinical practice and tracing of close contacts, but their epidemiological or clinical features remained vague.Methods: We analyzed 11,425 COVID-19 cases reported between January-August, 2020 in China. The accelerated failure time model, Logistic and modified Poisson regression models were used to investigate the determinants of prolonged incubation period, as well as their association with clinical severity and transmissibility, respectively.Result: Among local cases, 268 (10.2%) had a prolonged incubation period of > 14 days, which was more frequently seen among elderly patients, those residing in South China, with disease onset after Level I response measures administration, or being exposed in public places. Patients with prolonged incubation period had lower risk of severe illness (ORadjusted = 0.386, 95% CI: 0.203-0.677). A reduced transmissibility was observed for the primary patients with prolonged incubation period (50.4, 95% CI: 32.3-78.6%) than those with an incubation period of ≤14 days.Conclusions: The study provides evidence supporting a prolonged incubation period that exceeded 2 weeks in over 10% for COVID-19. Longer monitoring periods than 14 days for quarantine or persons potentially exposed to SARS-CoV-2 should be justified in extreme cases, especially for those elderly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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27. Epidemiology and Ecology of Severe Fever With Thrombocytopenia Syndrome in China, 2010‒2018.
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Miao, Dong, Liu, Ming-Jin, Wang, Yi-Xing, Ren, Xiang, Lu, Qing-Bin, Zhao, Guo-Ping, Dai, Ke, Li, Xin-Lou, Li, Hao, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Shi, Wen-Qiang, Wang, Li-Ping, Yang, Yang, Fang, Li-Qun, and Liu, Wei
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TICK-borne diseases ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,ECOLOGY ,PUBLIC health ,REGRESSION analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) - Abstract
Background The growing epidemics of severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS), an emerging tick-borne disease in East Asia, and its high case fatality rate have raised serious public health concerns. Methods Surveillance data on laboratory-confirmed SFTS cases in China were collected. The spatiotemporal dynamics and epidemiological features were explored. The socioeconomic and environmental drivers were identified for SFTS diffusion using survival analysis and for SFTS persistence using a two-stage generalized boosted regression tree model. Results During 2010‒2018, a total of 7721 laboratory-confirmed SFTS cases were reported in China, with an overall case fatality rate (CFR) of 10.5%. The average annual incidence increased >20 times and endemic areas expanded from 27 to 1574 townships, whereas the CFR declined from 19% to 10% during this period. Four geographical clusters—the Changbai Mountain area, the Jiaodong Peninsula, the Taishan Mountain area, and the Huaiyangshan Mountain area—were identified. Diffusion and persistence of the disease were both driven by elevation, high coverages of woods, crops, and shrubs, and the vicinity of habitats of migratory birds but had different meteorological drivers. Residents ≥60 years old in rural areas with crop fields and tea farms were at increased risk to SFTS. Conclusions Surveillance of SFTS and intervention programs need to be targeted at areas ecologically suitability for vector ticks and in the vicinity of migratory birds to curb the growing epidemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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28. Changes in notifiable infectious disease incidence in China during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Geng, Meng-Jie, Zhang, Hai-Yang, Yu, Lin-Jie, Lv, Chen-Long, Wang, Tao, Che, Tian-Le, Xu, Qiang, Jiang, Bao-Gui, Chen, Jin-Jin, Hay, Simon I., Li, Zhong-Jie, Gao, George F., Wang, Li-Ping, Yang, Yang, Fang, Li-Qun, and Liu, Wei
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COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,BLOODBORNE infections ,DISEASE incidence ,ZOONOSES ,PANDEMICS - Abstract
Nationwide nonpharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) have been effective at mitigating the spread of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19), but their broad impact on other diseases remains under-investigated. Here we report an ecological analysis comparing the incidence of 31 major notifiable infectious diseases in China in 2020 to the average level during 2014-2019, controlling for temporal phases defined by NPI intensity levels. Respiratory diseases and gastrointestinal or enteroviral diseases declined more than sexually transmitted or bloodborne diseases and vector-borne or zoonotic diseases. Early pandemic phases with more stringent NPIs were associated with greater reductions in disease incidence. Non-respiratory diseases, such as hand, foot and mouth disease, rebounded substantially towards the end of the year 2020 as the NPIs were relaxed. Statistical modeling analyses confirm that strong NPIs were associated with a broad mitigation effect on communicable diseases, but resurgence of non-respiratory diseases should be expected when the NPIs, especially restrictions of human movement and gathering, become less stringent. Non-pharmaceutical interventions implemented to mitigate COVID-19 transmission are likely to have impacted spread of other infectious diseases. Here, the authors investigate changes in the incidence of 31 notifiable infectious diseases using surveillance data from China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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29. Infection with severe fever with thrombocytopenia virus in healthy population: a cohort study in a high endemic region, China.
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Ye, Xiao-Lei, Dai, Ke, Lu, Qing-Bin, Huang, Yan-Qin, Lv, Shou-Ming, Zhang, Pan-He, Li, Jia-Chen, Zhang, Hai-Yang, Yang, Zhen-Dong, Cui, Ning, Yuan, Chun, Liu, Kun, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Zhang, Jiu-Song, Li, Hao, Yang, Yang, Fang, Li-Qun, and Liu, Wei
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IMMUNOGLOBULIN G ,SEROCONVERSION ,ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay ,PUBLIC health education ,COHORT analysis ,INDIGENOUS Australians - Abstract
Background: Severe fever with thrombocytopenia (SFTS) caused by SFTS virus (SFTSV) was a tick-borne hemorrhagic fever that posed significant threat to human health in Eastern Asia. The study was designed to measure the seroprevalence of SFTSV antibody in healthy population residing in a high endemic region. Methods: A cohort study was performed on healthy residents in Shangcheng County in Xinyang City from April to December in 2018, where the highest SFTS incidence in China was reported. Anti-SFTSV IgG was measured by indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and neutralizing antibody (NAb) was detected by using PRNT50. The logistic regression models were performed to analyze the variables that were associated with seropositive rates. Results: Totally 886 individuals were recruited. The baseline seroprevalence that was tested before the epidemic season was 11.9% (70/587) for IgG and 6.8% (40/587) for NAb, which was increased to 13.4% (47/350) and 7.7% (27/350) during the epidemic season, and further to 15.8% (80/508) and 9.8% (50/508) post epidemic. The IgG antibody-based seropositivity was significantly related to the patients aged ≥ 70 years old [adjusted odds ratio (OR) = 2.440, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.334–4.461 compared to the group of < 50 years old, P = 0.004], recent contact with cats (adjusted OR = 2.195, 95% CI: 1.261–3.818, P = 0.005), and working in tea garden (adjusted OR = 1.698, 95% CI: 1.002–2.880, P = 0.049) by applying multivariate logistic regression model. The NAb based seropositivity was similarly related to the patients aged ≥ 70 years old (adjusted OR = 2.691, 95% CI: 1.271–5.695 compared to the group of < 50 years old, P = 0.010), and recent contact with cats (OR = 2.648, 95% CI: 1.419–4.941, P = 0.002). For a cohort of individuals continually sampled with 1-year apart, the anti-SFTSV IgG were maintained at a stable level, while the NAb level reduced. Conclusions: Subclinical infection might not provide adequate immunity to protect reinfection of SFTSV, thus highlighting the ongoing threats of SFTS in endemic regions, which called for an imperative need for vaccine development. Identification of risk factors might help to target high-risk population for public health education and vaccination in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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30. Sex Differences in Case Fatality Rate of Patients With Severe Fever With Thrombocytopenia Syndrome.
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Zhao, Jing, Lu, Qing-Bin, Li, Hao, Yuan, Yang, Cui, Ning, Yuan, Chun, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Yang, Zhen-Dong, Ruan, Shi-Man, Liu, Lan-Zheng, Du, Juan, Fang, Li-Qun, and Liu, Wei
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IMMUNOGLOBULIN M ,DEATH rate ,AGE differences ,AGE groups ,KILLER cells ,THROMBOCYTOPENIA ,FEVER ,FEMALES - Abstract
Background: Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is a tick-borne disease with high mortality. However, detailed analysis is lacking to explore the complex effect of sex with age or comorbidities. Methods: A retrospective cohort study was performed among 2,938 SFTS patients entered during 2011–2020 in Xinyang, China. The case fatality rate (CFR) was estimated for their association with sex, age, and comorbidities by an interactive way. The difference of immune response between sex was explored in an age dependent way. Results: An overall CFR of 15.3% (450/2,938) was obtained, which appeared to be higher in males than in females [17.7% vs. 13.6%, adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 1.24; 95% CI, 1.00–1.53; P = 0.048] and increased dramatically with age (P < 0.001). The associations between sex and SFTS fatal outcome were age-dependent and varied according to the status of comorbidities. The mortality-related risk conferred by older age was more pronounced in males, with aOR (95% CI) to be 5.76 (3.75–8.84) vs. 5.30 (3.54–7.95) in female. Sex-stratified analysis disclosed significant associations between death and comorbidities among female patients (aOR = 1.87, 95% CI: 1.40–2.49; P < 0.001), while none among males. Among females, the significant associations between presence of comorbidity and fatal outcome differed among age groups, with aOR (95% CI) decreased from 2.28 (1.16–4.46) in ≤60 years, to 2.06 (1.34–3.18) in 60–70 years and further to 1.55 (0.97–2.47) in >70 years. Altogether 194 SFTS patients were randomly selected for the test of B cells, natural killer (NK) cells, CD4 cells percentages, and anti-SFTSV IgM antibody level, the results revealed that males >60 years had significantly decreased percentages of B cells, CD4 cells, lower anti-SFTSV IgM antibody titer, and increased level of NK cells than male aged ≤60 years, while none of these age specific differences was observed in the females. This finding underlies the more pronounced age specific difference in CFR among male than female. Conclusions: Males had a significantly higher mortality of SFTS than did females, and more likely to be affected by aging for SFTS mortality. This difference can be explained by the effect from comorbidities and the host immunity. It is essential to take a sex- and age-based approach to SFTS treatment and management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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31. The Identification and Genetic Characterization of Parechovirus Infection Among Pediatric Patients With Wide Clinical Spectrum in Chongqing, China.
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Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Zhao, Rui-Qiu, Chen, Jin-Jin, Yuan, Yang, Tang, Xiang, Zhou, Zi-Wei, Ren, Luo, Lu, Qin-Bin, Wang, Yu-Na, Zhang, Hai-Yang, Zhang, Pan-He, Fang, Li-Qun, Zhou, Hai-Sheng, Liu, En-Mei, Xu, Hong-Mei, and Liu, Wei
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FOOT & mouth disease ,HAND, foot & mouth disease ,CHILD patients ,PARAINFLUENZA viruses ,RESPIRATORY infections - Abstract
Human parechoviruses (HPeVs) are important causes of infection in children. However, without a comprehensive and persistent surveillance, the epidemiology and clinical features of HPeV infection remain ambiguous. We performed a hospital-based surveillance study among three groups of pediatric patients with acute respiratory infection (Group 1), acute diarrhea (Group 2), and hand, foot and mouth disease (Group 3) in Chongqing, China, from 2009 to 2015. Among 10,212 tested patients, 707 (6.92%) were positive for HPeV, with the positive rates differing significantly among three groups (Group 1, 3.43%; Group 2, 14.94%; Group 3, 3.55%; P < 0.001). The co-infection with other pathogens was detected in 75.2% (531/707) of HPeV-positive patients. Significant negative interaction between HPeV and Parainfluenza virus (PIV) (P = 0.046, OR = 0.59, 95% CI = 0.34–0.98) and positive interactions between HPeV and Enterovirus (EV) (P = 0.015, OR = 2.28, 95% CI = 1.23–4.73) were identified. Among 707 HPeV-positive patients, 592 (83.73%) were successfully sequenced, and 10 genotypes were identified, with HPeV1 (n = 396), HPeV4 (n = 86), and HPeV3 (n = 46) as the most frequently seen. The proportion of genotypes differed among three groups (P < 0.001), with HPeV1 and HPeV4 overrepresented in Group 2 and HPeV6 overrepresented in Group 3. The spatial patterns of HPeV genotypes disclosed more close clustering of the currently sequenced strains than those from other countries/regions, although they were indeed mixed. Three main genotypes (HPeV1, HPeV3, and HPeV4) had shown distinct seasonal peaks, highlighting a bi-annual cycle of all HpeV and two genotypes (HPeV 1 and HPeV 4) with peaks in odd-numbered years and with peaks in even-numbered years HPeV3. Significantly higher HPeV1 viral loads were associated with severe diarrhea in Group 2 (P = 0.044), while associated with HPeV single infection than HPeV-EV coinfection among HFMD patients (P = 0.001). It's concluded that HPeV infection was correlated with wide clinical spectrum in pediatric patients with a high variety of genotypes determined. Still no clinical significance can be confirmed, which warranted more molecular surveillance in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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32. Epidemiology and evolution of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, 2012–2020.
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Zhang, An-Ran, Shi, Wen-Qiang, Liu, Kun, Li, Xin-Lou, Liu, Ming-Jin, Zhang, Wen-Hui, Zhao, Guo-Ping, Chen, Jin-Jin, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Miao, Dong, Ma, Wei, Liu, Wei, Yang, Yang, and Fang, Li-Qun
- Subjects
MERS coronavirus ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,MIDDLE East respiratory syndrome ,MOTOR vehicle drivers - Abstract
Background: The ongoing transmission of the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) in the Middle East and its expansion to other regions are raising concerns of a potential pandemic. An in-depth analysis about both population and molecular epidemiology of this pathogen is needed. Methods: MERS cases reported globally as of June 2020 were collected mainly from World Health Organization official reports, supplemented by other reliable sources. Determinants for case fatality and spatial diffusion of MERS were assessed with Logistic regressions and Cox proportional hazard models, respectively. Phylogenetic and phylogeographic analyses were performed to examine the evolution and migration history of MERS-CoV. Results: A total of 2562 confirmed MERS cases with 150 case clusters were reported with a case fatality rate of 32.7% (95% CI: 30.9‒34.6%). Saudi Arabia accounted for 83.6% of the cases. Age of ≥ 65 years old, underlying conditions and ≥ 5 days delay in diagnosis were independent risk factors for death. However, a history of animal contact was associated with a higher risk (adjusted OR = 2.97, 95% CI: 1.10–7.98) among female cases < 65 years but with a lower risk (adjusted OR = 0.31, 95% CI: 0.18–0.51) among male cases ≥ 65 years old. Diffusion of the disease was fastest from its origin in Saudi Arabia to the east, and was primarily driven by the transportation network. The most recent sub-clade C5.1 (since 2013) was associated with non-synonymous mutations and a higher mortality rate. Phylogeographic analyses pointed to Riyadh of Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi of the United Arab Emirates as the hubs for both local and international spread of MERS-CoV. Conclusions: MERS-CoV remains primarily locally transmitted in the Middle East, with opportunistic exportation to other continents and a potential of causing transmission clusters of human cases. Animal contact is associated with a higher risk of death, but the association differs by age and sex. Transportation network is the leading driver for the spatial diffusion of the disease. These findings how this pathogen spread are helpful for targeting public health surveillance and interventions to control endemics and to prevent a potential pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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33. A dataset of distribution and diversity of blood-sucking mites in China.
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Meng, Fan-Fei, Xu, Qiang, Chen, Jin-Jin, Ji, Yang, Zhang, Wen-Hui, Fan, Zheng-Wei, Zhao, Guo-Ping, Jiang, Bao-Gui, Shi, Tao-Xing, Fang, Li-Qun, and Liu, Wei
- Subjects
TSUTSUGAMUSHI disease ,PUBLIC health ,GEOGRAPHIC information systems ,RISK assessment - Abstract
Mite-borne diseases, such as scrub typhus and hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome, present an increasing global public health concern. Most of the mite-borne diseases are caused by the blood-sucking mites. To present a comprehensive understanding of the distributions and diversity of blood-sucking mites in China, we derived information from peer-reviewed journal articles, thesis publications and books related to mites in both Chinese and English between 1978 and 2020. Geographic information of blood-sucking mites' occurrence and mite species were extracted and georeferenced at the county level. Standard operating procedures were applied to remove duplicates and ensure accuracy of the data. This dataset contains 6,443 records of mite species occurrences at the county level in China. This geographical dataset provides an overview of the species diversity and wide distributions of blood-sucking mites, and can potentially be used in distribution prediction of mite species and risk assessment of mite-borne diseases in China. Measurement(s) Distribution Technology Type(s) digital curation • Geographic Information System Factor Type(s) genus • species • province • city • county • GPS Sample Characteristic - Organism mite • Acari Sample Characteristic - Location China Machine-accessible metadata file describing the reported data: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.14459055 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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34. The Impact of Weather and Air Pollution on Viral Infection and Disease Outcome Among Pediatric Pneumonia Patients in Chongqing, China, from 2009 to 2018: A Prospective Observational Study.
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Wang, Zhi-Bo, Ren, Luo, Lu, Qing-Bin, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Miao, Dong, Hu, Yuan-Yuan, Dai, Ke, Li, Hao, Luo, Zheng-Xiu, Fang, Li-Qun, Liu, En-Mei, and Liu, Wei
- Subjects
RISK factors of pneumonia ,AIR pollution ,PNEUMONIA ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CHILDREN'S hospitals ,WEATHER ,RISK assessment ,SEVERITY of illness index ,VIRUS diseases ,RESPIRATORY syncytial virus infections ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background For pediatric pneumonia, the meteorological and air pollution indicators have been frequently investigated for their association with viral circulation but not for their impact on disease severity. Methods We performed a 10-year prospective, observational study in 1 hospital in Chongqing, China, to recruit children with pneumonia. Eight commonly seen respiratory viruses were tested. Autoregressive distributed lag (ADL) and random forest (RF) models were used to fit monthly detection rates of each virus at the population level and to predict the possibility of severe pneumonia at the individual level, respectively. Results Between 2009 and 2018, 6611 pediatric pneumonia patients were included, and 4846 (73.3%) tested positive for at least 1 respiratory virus. The patient median age was 9 months (interquartile range, 4‒20). ADL models demonstrated a decent fitting of detection rates of R
2 > 0.7 for respiratory syncytial virus, human rhinovirus, parainfluenza virus, and human metapneumovirus. Based on the RF models, the area under the curve for host-related factors alone was 0.88 (95% confidence interval [CI],.87‒.89) and 0.86 (95% CI,.85‒.88) for meteorological and air pollution indicators alone and 0.62 (95% CI,.60‒.63) for viral infections alone. The final model indicated that 9 weather and air pollution indicators were important determinants of severe pneumonia, with a relative contribution of 62.53%, which is significantly higher than respiratory viral infections (7.36%). Conclusions Meteorological and air pollution predictors contributed more to severe pneumonia in children than did respiratory viruses. These meteorological data could help predict times when children would be at increased risk for severe pneumonia and when interventions, such as reducing outdoor activities, may be warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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35. The differential demographic pattern of coronavirus disease 2019 fatality outside Hubei and from six hospitals in Hubei, China: a descriptive analysis.
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Lu, Qing-Bin, Zhang, Hai-Yang, Che, Tian-Le, Zhao, Han, Chen, Xi, Li, Rui, Jiang, Wan-Li, Zeng, Hao-Long, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Long, Hui, Wang, Qiang, Wu, Ming-Qing, Ward, Michael P., Chen, Yue, Zhang, Zhi-Jie, Yang, Yang, Fang, Li-Qun, and Liu, Wei
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,AGE groups ,DEATH rate ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,MULTIVARIATE analysis - Abstract
Background: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) epidemic has been largely controlled in China, to the point where case fatality rate (CFR) data can be comprehensively evaluated.Methods: Data on confirmed patients, with a final outcome reported as of 29 March 2020, were obtained from official websites and other internet sources. The hospitalized CFR (HCFR) was estimated, epidemiological features described, and risk factors for a fatal outcome identified.Results: The overall HCFR in China was estimated to be 4.6% (95% CI 4.5-4.8%, P < 0.001). It increased with age and was higher in males than females. Although the highest HCFR observed was in male patients ≥70 years old, the relative risks for death outcome by sex varied across age groups, and the greatest HCFR risk ratio for males vs. females was shown in the age group of 50-60 years, higher than age groups of 60-70 and ≥ 70 years. Differential age/sex HCFR patterns across geographical regions were found: the age effect on HCFR was greater in other provinces outside Hubei than in Wuhan. An effect of longer interval from symptom onset to admission was only observed outside Hubei, not in Wuhan. By performing multivariate analysis and survival analysis, the higher HCFR was associated with older age (both P < 0.001), and male sex (both P < 0.001). Only in regions outside Hubei, longer interval from symptom onset to admission, were associated with higher HCFR.Conclusions: This up-to-date and comprehensive picture of COVID-19 HCFR and its drivers will help healthcare givers target limited medical resources to patients with high risk of fatality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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36. Association between fatality rate of COVID-19 and selenium deficiency in China.
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Zhang, Hai-Yang, Zhang, An-Ran, Lu, Qing-Bin, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Zhang, Zhi-Jie, Guan, Xiu-Gang, Che, Tian-Le, Yang, Yang, Li, Hao, Liu, Wei, and Fang, Li-Qun
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,DEATH rate ,COVID-19 pandemic ,SELENIUM ,VIRUS diseases - Abstract
Background: COVID-19 has impacted populations around the world, with the fatality rate varying dramatically across countries. Selenium, as one of the important micronutrients implicated in viral infections, was suggested to play roles.Methods: An ecological study was performed to assess the association between the COVID-19 related fatality and the selenium content both from crops and topsoil, in China.Results: Totally, 14,045 COVID-19 cases were reported from 147 cities during 8 December 2019-13 December 2020 were included. Based on selenium content in crops, the case fatality rates (CFRs) gradually increased from 1.17% in non-selenium-deficient areas, to 1.28% in moderate-selenium-deficient areas, and further to 3.16% in severe-selenium-deficient areas (P = 0.002). Based on selenium content in topsoil, the CFRs gradually increased from 0.76% in non-selenium-deficient areas, to 1.70% in moderate-selenium-deficient areas, and further to 1.85% in severe-selenium-deficient areas (P < 0.001). The zero-inflated negative binomial regression model showed a significantly higher fatality risk in cities with severe-selenium-deficient selenium content in crops than non-selenium-deficient cities, with incidence rate ratio (IRR) of 3.88 (95% CIs: 1.21-12.52), which was further confirmed by regression fitting the association between CFR of COVID-19 and selenium content in topsoil, with the IRR of 2.38 (95% CIs: 1.14-4.98) for moderate-selenium-deficient cities and 3.06 (1.49-6.27) for severe-selenium-deficient cities.Conclusions: Regional selenium deficiency might be related to an increased CFR of COVID-19. Future studies are needed to explore the associations between selenium status and disease outcome at individual-level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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37. Epidemiology and evolution of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, 2012–2020.
- Author
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Zhang, An-Ran, Shi, Wen-Qiang, Liu, Kun, Li, Xin-Lou, Liu, Ming-Jin, Zhang, Wen-Hui, Zhao, Guo-Ping, Chen, Jin-Jin, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Miao, Dong, Ma, Wei, Liu, Wei, Yang, Yang, and Fang, Li-Qun
- Subjects
MERS coronavirus ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,MIDDLE East respiratory syndrome ,MOTOR vehicle drivers - Abstract
Background: The ongoing transmission of the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) in the Middle East and its expansion to other regions are raising concerns of a potential pandemic. An in-depth analysis about both population and molecular epidemiology of this pathogen is needed. Methods: MERS cases reported globally as of June 2020 were collected mainly from World Health Organization official reports, supplemented by other reliable sources. Determinants for case fatality and spatial diffusion of MERS were assessed with Logistic regressions and Cox proportional hazard models, respectively. Phylogenetic and phylogeographic analyses were performed to examine the evolution and migration history of MERS-CoV. Results: A total of 2562 confirmed MERS cases with 150 case clusters were reported with a case fatality rate of 32.7% (95% CI: 30.9‒34.6%). Saudi Arabia accounted for 83.6% of the cases. Age of ≥ 65 years old, underlying conditions and ≥ 5 days delay in diagnosis were independent risk factors for death. However, a history of animal contact was associated with a higher risk (adjusted OR = 2.97, 95% CI: 1.10–7.98) among female cases < 65 years but with a lower risk (adjusted OR = 0.31, 95% CI: 0.18–0.51) among male cases ≥ 65 years old. Diffusion of the disease was fastest from its origin in Saudi Arabia to the east, and was primarily driven by the transportation network. The most recent sub-clade C5.1 (since 2013) was associated with non-synonymous mutations and a higher mortality rate. Phylogeographic analyses pointed to Riyadh of Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi of the United Arab Emirates as the hubs for both local and international spread of MERS-CoV. Conclusions: MERS-CoV remains primarily locally transmitted in the Middle East, with opportunistic exportation to other continents and a potential of causing transmission clusters of human cases. Animal contact is associated with a higher risk of death, but the association differs by age and sex. Transportation network is the leading driver for the spatial diffusion of the disease. These findings how this pathogen spread are helpful for targeting public health surveillance and interventions to control endemics and to prevent a potential pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Mapping ticks and tick-borne pathogens in China.
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Zhao, Guo-Ping, Wang, Yi-Xing, Fan, Zheng-Wei, Ji, Yang, Liu, Ming-jin, Zhang, Wen-Hui, Li, Xin-Lou, Zhou, Shi-Xia, Li, Hao, Liang, Song, Liu, Wei, Yang, Yang, and Fang, Li-Qun
- Subjects
H7N9 Influenza ,TICKS ,TICK-borne diseases ,CULICOIDES ,DISEASE vectors ,DERMACENTOR ,ECOLOGICAL niche ,RHIPICEPHALUS - Abstract
Understanding ecological niches of major tick species and prevalent tick-borne pathogens is crucial for efficient surveillance and control of tick-borne diseases. Here we provide an up-to-date review on the spatial distributions of ticks and tick-borne pathogens in China. We map at the county level 124 tick species, 103 tick-borne agents, and human cases infected with 29 species (subspecies) of tick-borne pathogens that were reported in China during 1950−2018. Haemaphysalis longicornis is found to harbor the highest variety of tick-borne agents, followed by Ixodes persulcatus, Dermacentor nutalli and Rhipicephalus microplus. Using a machine learning algorithm, we assess ecoclimatic and socioenvironmental drivers for the distributions of 19 predominant vector ticks and two tick-borne pathogens associated with the highest disease burden. The model-predicted suitable habitats for the 19 tick species are 14‒476% larger in size than the geographic areas where these species were detected, indicating severe under-detection. Tick species harboring pathogens of imminent threats to public health should be prioritized for more active field surveillance. Ticks are an important vector of disease in China, posing threats to humans, livestock and wild animals. Here, Zhao et al. compile a database of the distributions of the 124 tick species known in China and 103 tick-borne pathogens and predict the additional suitable habitats for the predominant vector species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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39. Mapping the global potential transmission hotspots for severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome by machine learning methods.
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Miao, Dong, Dai, Ke, Zhao, Guo-Ping, Li, Xin-Lou, Shi, Wen-Qiang, Zhang, Jiu Song, Yang, Yang, Liu, Wei, and Fang, Li-Qun
- Published
- 2020
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40. Epidemiology of imported infectious diseases, China, 2014-18.
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Wu, Yang, Liu, Meng-Yang, Wang, Jin-Long, Zhang, Hai-Yang, Sun, Yu, Yuan, Yang, Zhou, Shi-Xia, Wang, Yi-Xing, Wang, Zhi-Bo, Zhu, Ying-Xuan, Han, Yong, Liu, Meng-Meng, Li, Wei-Ming, Wang, Li-Ping, Guo, Xiu-Hua, Fang, Li-Qun, and Liu, Wei
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COMMUNICABLE diseases ,SEXUALLY transmitted diseases ,VECTOR-borne diseases ,COMMON cold ,EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
Background: The frequent movement of population between countries brings an increasing number of travel-related infections. This study aims to define the spectrum and dynamics of imported infections observed from international travel in the Chinese mainland.Methods: Sick travellers were screened by inbound sentinel surveillance and post-travel clinic visits from 2014 to 18. The infections were classified as respiratory, gastrointestinal, vector-borne, blood/sexually transmitted and mucocutaneous. The analysed variables included the place of origin of the travellers (Chinese or foreign) and the time when travel-related infection was present (at the time of return, during travel and post-travel visits to the clinic).Results: In total, 58 677 cases were identified amongst 1 409 265 253 travellers, with an incidence of 41.64/million, comprising during-travel incidence of 27.44/million and a post-travel incidence of 14.20/million. Respiratory infections constituted the highest proportion of illnesses during travel (81.19%, 31 393 of 38 667), which mainly came from Asian countries and tourists; with influenza virus and rhinovirus infections being mainly diagnosed. Vector-borne diseases constituted the highest proportion of post-travel illnesses (98.14%, 19 638 of 20 010), which were mainly diagnosed from African countries and labourers; with malaria and dengue fever being mainly diagnosed. The differential infection spectrum varied in terms of the traveller's demography, travel destination and travel purpose. As such, a higher proportion of foreign travellers had blood/sexually transmitted diseases (89.85%, 2832 of 3152), while Chinese citizens had a higher prevalence of vector-borne diseases (85.98%, 19 247 of 22 387) and gastrointestinal diseases (79.36%, 1115 of 1405). The highest incidence rate was observed amongst travellers arriving from Africa, while the lowest was observed amongst travellers arriving from Europe.Conclusions: The findings might help in preparing recommendations for travellers and also aid in primary care or other clinics that prepare travellers before trips abroad. The findings will also help to identify locations and the associated types of infections that might require attention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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41. Learning Impacts of Pretraining Video-Assisted Debriefing With Simulated Errors or Trainees' Errors in Medical Students in Basic Life Support Training: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Li, Qi, Lin, Jing, Fang, Li-Qun, Ma, Er-Li, Liang, Peng, Shi, Ting-Wei, Xiao, Hong, and Liu, Jin
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- 2019
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42. Genetic Diversity and the Spatio-Temporal Analyses of Hantaviruses in Shandong Province, China.
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Zuo, Shu-Qing, Li, Xiu-Jun, Wang, Zhi-Qiang, Jiang, Jia-Fu, Fang, Li-Qun, Zhang, Wen-Hui, Zhang, Jiu-Song, Zhao, Qiu-Min, and Cao, Wu-Chun
- Abstract
Hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) is a serious public health problem in Shandong Province, China. We conducted an epizootiologic investigation and phylogeographic and phylodynamic analyses to infer the phylogenetic relationships of hantaviruses in space and time, and gain further insights into their evolutionary dynamics in Shandong Province. Our data indicated that the Seoul virus (SEOV) is distributed throughout Shandong, whereas Hantaan virus (HTNV) co-circulates with SEOV in the eastern and southern areas of Shandong. Their distribution showed strong geographic clustering. In addition, our analyses indicated multiple evolutionary paths, long-distance transmission, and demographic expansion events for SEOV in some areas. Selection pressure analyses revealed that negative selection on hantaviruses acted as the principal evolutionary force, whereas a little evidence of positive selection exists. We found that several positively selected sites were located within major functional regions and indicated the importance of these residues for adaptive evolution of hantaviruses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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43. Mapping the Distribution of Anthrax in Mainland China, 2005–2013.
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Chen, Wan-Jun, Lai, Sheng-Jie, Yang, Yang, Liu, Kun, Li, Xin-Lou, Yao, Hong-Wu, Li, Yu, Zhou, Hang, Wang, Li-Ping, Mu, Di, Yin, Wen-Wu, Fang, Li-Qun, Yu, Hong-Jie, and Cao, Wu-Chun
- Subjects
ANTHRAX ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,ZOONOSES ,PUBLIC health ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,DISEASE incidence - Abstract
Background: Anthrax, a global re-emerging zoonotic disease in recent years is enzootic in mainland China. Despite its significance to the public health, spatiotemporal distributions of the disease in human and livestock and its potential driving factors remain poorly understood. Methodology/Principal Findings: Using the national surveillance data of human and livestock anthrax from 2005 to 2013, we conducted a retrospective epidemiological study and risk assessment of anthrax in mainland China. The potential determinants for the temporal and spatial distributions of human anthrax were also explored. We found that the majority of human anthrax cases were located in six provinces in western and northeastern China, and five clustering areas with higher incidences were identified. The disease mostly peaked in July or August, and males aged 30–49 years had higher incidence than other subgroups. Monthly incidence of human anthrax was positively correlated with monthly average temperature, relative humidity and monthly accumulative rainfall with lags of 0–2 months. A boosted regression trees (BRT) model at the county level reveals that densities of cattle, sheep and human, coverage of meadow, coverage of typical grassland, elevation, coverage of topsoil with pH > 6.1, concentration of organic carbon in topsoil, and the meteorological factors have contributed substantially to the spatial distribution of the disease. The model-predicted probability of occurrence of human cases in mainland China was mapped at the county level. Conclusions/Significance: Anthrax in China was characterized by significant seasonality and spatial clustering. The spatial distribution of human anthrax was largely driven by livestock husbandry, human density, land cover, elevation, topsoil features and climate. Enhanced surveillance and intervention for livestock and human anthrax in the high-risk regions, particularly on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, is the key to the prevention of human infections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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44. Correction to: Epidemiology and evolution of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, 2012–2020.
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Zhang, An-Ran, Shi, Wen-Qiang, Liu, Kun, Li, Xin-Lou, Liu, Ming-Jin, Zhang, Wen-Hui, Zhao, Guo-Ping, Chen, Jin-Jin, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Miao, Dong, Ma, Wei, Liu, Wei, Yang, Yang, and Fang, Li-Qun
- Subjects
MERS coronavirus ,EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
Correction to: Epidemiology and evolution of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, 2012-2020 Epidemiology and evolution of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, 2012-2020. Countries were colored according to the dominant transmission type: (i) zoonotic transmission plus human-to-human transmission, (ii) zoonotic transmission without human-to-human transmission, (iii) imported infection plus human-to-human transmission, and (iv) imported infection without human-to-human transmission The original paper has been updated. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2021
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45. The Spatiotemporal Expansion of Human Rabies and Its Probable Explanation in Mainland China, 2004-2013.
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Yao, Hong-Wu, Yang, Yang, Liu, Kun, Li, Xin-Lou, Zuo, Shu-Qing, Sun, Ruo-Xi, Fang, Li-Qun, and Cao, Wu-Chun
- Subjects
H7N9 Influenza ,RABIES ,POISSON regression ,PUBLIC health ,ECONOMIC status ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
Background: Human rabies is a significant public health concern in mainland China. However, the neglect of rabies expansion and scarce analyses of the dynamics have made the spatiotemporal spread pattern of human rabies and its determinants being poorly understood. Methods: We collected geographic locations and timeline of reported human rabies cases, rabies sequences and socioeconomic variables for the years 2004-2013, and integrated multidisciplinary approaches, including epidemiological characterization, hotspots identification, risk factors analysis and phylogeographic inference, to explore the spread pattern of human rabies in mainland China during the last decade. Results: The results show that human rabies distribution and hotspots were expanding from southeastern regions to north or west regions, which could be associated with the evolution of the virus, especially the clade I-G. A Panel Poisson Regression analysis reveals that human rabies incidences had significant correlation with the education level, GDP per capita, temperature at one-month lag and canine rabies outbreak at two-month lag. Conclusions: The reduction in the overall human rabies incidence was accompanied by a westward and northward expansion of the circulating region in mainland China. Higher risk of human rabies was associated with lower level of education and economic status. New clades of rabies, especial Clade I-G, played an important role in recent spread. Our findings provide valuable information for rabies control and prevention in the future. Author Summary: Although the number of human rabies cases has slightly decreased since 2008 in mainland China, the rabies seemed to be gradually expanding to the low-incidence or non-epidemic areas. The neglect of rabies expansion and scarce analyses of the dynamics have made the spatiotemporal spread pattern of human rabies and its determinants poorly understood. Here, we integrate multidisciplinary approaches to explore and describe the spread pattern and evolution dynamic of human rabies in mainland China during the last decade. The results indicated that the reduction in the overall human rabies incidence was accompanied by a westward and northward expansion of the circulating region, which could be associated with the evolution of the virus, especially the clade I-G. And the education level, GDP per capita, temperature at one-month lag and canine rabies outbreak at two-month lag were firstly found to be significant correlation human rabies incidences according to the Panel Poisson Regression analysis. Our findings give a relatively complete picture about the human rabies spatiotemporal dynamics and spread pattern, thus provide new insights on risk factors and control strategies for the disease spread. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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46. The Spatiotemporal Expansion of Human Rabies and Its Probable Explanation in Mainland China, 2004-2013.
- Author
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Yao, Hong-Wu, Yang, Yang, Liu, Kun, Li, Xin-Lou, Zuo, Shu-Qing, Sun, Ruo-Xi, Fang, Li-Qun, and Cao, Wu-Chun
- Subjects
RABIES ,PUBLIC health research ,ETIOLOGY of diseases ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,PHYLOGEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Background: Human rabies is a significant public health concern in mainland China. However, the neglect of rabies expansion and scarce analyses of the dynamics have made the spatiotemporal spread pattern of human rabies and its determinants being poorly understood. Methods: We collected geographic locations and timeline of reported human rabies cases, rabies sequences and socioeconomic variables for the years 2004-2013, and integrated multidisciplinary approaches, including epidemiological characterization, hotspots identification, risk factors analysis and phylogeographic inference, to explore the spread pattern of human rabies in mainland China during the last decade. Results: The results show that human rabies distribution and hotspots were expanding from southeastern regions to north or west regions, which could be associated with the evolution of the virus, especially the clade I-G. A Panel Poisson Regression analysis reveals that human rabies incidences had significant correlation with the education level, GDP per capita, temperature at one-month lag and canine rabies outbreak at two-month lag. Conclusions: The reduction in the overall human rabies incidence was accompanied by a westward and northward expansion of the circulating region in mainland China. Higher risk of human rabies was associated with lower level of education and economic status. New clades of rabies, especial Clade I-G, played an important role in recent spread. Our findings provide valuable information for rabies control and prevention in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Epidemiologic Features and Environmental Risk Factors of Severe Fever with Thrombocytopenia Syndrome, Xinyang, China.
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Liu, Kun, Cui, Ning, Fang, Li-Qun, Wang, Bing-Jun, Lu, Qing-Bin, Peng, Wei, Li, Hao, Wang, Li-Yuan, Liang, Song, Wang, Hong-Yu, Zhang, Yao-Yun, Zhuang, Lu, Yang, Hong, Gray, Gregory C., de Vlas, Sake J., Liu, Wei, and Cao, Wu-Chun
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ENVIRONMENTAL risk ,FEVER ,POISSON regression ,THROMBOCYTOPENIA ,SYNDROMES ,EMERGING infectious diseases - Abstract
Background: Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is an emerging infectious disease discovered in rural areas of Central China in 2009, caused by a novel bunyavirus, SFTS virus (SFTSV). The disease usually presents as fever, thrombocytopenia, and leukocytopenia, with case-fatality rates ranging from 2.5% to 30%. Haemaphysalis longicornis was suspected to be the most likely vector of SFTSV. By the end of 2012, the disease had expanded to 13 provinces of China. SFTS patients have been reported in Japan and South Korea, and a disease similar to SFTS has been reported in the United States. Methodology/Principal Findings: We characterized the epidemiologic features of 504 confirmed SFTS cases in Xinyang Region, the most severely SFTS-afflicted region in China from 2011 to 2012, and assessed the environmental risk factors. All cases occurred during March to November, with the epidemic peaking from May to July. The patients' ages ranged from 7 to 87 years (median 61 years), and the annual incidence increased with age (χ
2 test for trend, P<0.001). The female-to-male ratio of cases was 1.58, and 97.0% of the cases were farmers who resided in the southern and western parts of the region. The Poisson regression analysis revealed that the spatial variations of SFTS incidence were significantly associated with the shrub, forest, and rain-fed cropland areas. Conclusions: The distribution of SFTS showed highly significant temporal and spatial heterogeneity in Xinyang Region, with the majority of SFTS cases being elderly farmers who resided in the southern and western parts of the region, mostly acquiring infection between May and July when H. longicornis is highly active. The shrub, rain-fed, and rain-fed cropland areas were associated with high risk for this disease. Author Summary: Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is an emerging infectious disease discovered in rural areas of Central China in 2009, caused by a novel bunyavirus, SFTS virus (SFTSV). The disease usually presents as fever, thrombocytopenia, and leukocytopenia, with case-fatality rates ranging from 2.5% to 30%. By the end of 2012, the disease had expanded to 13 provinces of China. SFTS patients have been reported in Japan and South Korea, and a disease similar to SFTS has been reported in the United States. Here we characterized the epidemiologic features of 504 confirmed SFTS cases in Xinyang, the most severely SFTS-affected region in China from 2011 to 2012, and identified the environmental risk factors. We found the distribution of SFTS cases showed highly significant temporal and spatial heterogeneity, with the majority of SFTS cases being elderly farmers who resided in the southern and western parts of the region, mostly acquiring infection between May and July when H. longicornis is highly active. The shrub, forest, and rain-fed cropland areas were strongly associated with high risk for SFTS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Epidemiologic Features and Environmental Risk Factors of Severe Fever with Thrombocytopenia Syndrome, Xinyang, China.
- Author
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Liu, Kun, Cui, Ning, Fang, Li-Qun, Wang, Bing-Jun, Lu, Qing-Bin, Peng, Wei, Li, Hao, Wang, Li-Yuan, Liang, Song, Wang, Hong-Yu, Zhang, Yao-Yun, Zhuang, Lu, Yang, Hong, Gray, Gregory C., de Vlas, Sake J., Liu, Wei, and Cao, Wu-Chun
- Subjects
THROMBOCYTOPENIA ,BLOOD platelet disorders ,PRELEUKEMIA ,THROMBOPENIC purpura ,BUNYAVIRUSES ,ARBOVIRUSES - Abstract
Background: Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is an emerging infectious disease discovered in rural areas of Central China in 2009, caused by a novel bunyavirus, SFTS virus (SFTSV). The disease usually presents as fever, thrombocytopenia, and leukocytopenia, with case-fatality rates ranging from 2.5% to 30%. Haemaphysalis longicornis was suspected to be the most likely vector of SFTSV. By the end of 2012, the disease had expanded to 13 provinces of China. SFTS patients have been reported in Japan and South Korea, and a disease similar to SFTS has been reported in the United States. Methodology/Principal Findings: We characterized the epidemiologic features of 504 confirmed SFTS cases in Xinyang Region, the most severely SFTS-afflicted region in China from 2011 to 2012, and assessed the environmental risk factors. All cases occurred during March to November, with the epidemic peaking from May to July. The patients' ages ranged from 7 to 87 years (median 61 years), and the annual incidence increased with age (χ
2 test for trend, P<0.001). The female-to-male ratio of cases was 1.58, and 97.0% of the cases were farmers who resided in the southern and western parts of the region. The Poisson regression analysis revealed that the spatial variations of SFTS incidence were significantly associated with the shrub, forest, and rain-fed cropland areas. Conclusions: The distribution of SFTS showed highly significant temporal and spatial heterogeneity in Xinyang Region, with the majority of SFTS cases being elderly farmers who resided in the southern and western parts of the region, mostly acquiring infection between May and July when H. longicornis is highly active. The shrub, rain-fed, and rain-fed cropland areas were associated with high risk for this disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Distribution and Risk Factors of 2009 Pandemic Influenza A (H1N1) in Mainland China.
- Author
-
Fang, Li-Qun, Wang, Li-Ping, de Vlas, Sake J., Liang, Song, Tong, Shi-Lu, Li, Yan-Li, Li, Ya-Pin, Qian, Quan, Yang, Hong, Zhou, Mai-Geng, Wang, Xiao-Feng, Richardus, Jan Hendrik, Ma, Jia-Qi, and Cao, Wu-Chun
- Published
- 2012
50. Distribution and Risk Factors of 2009 Pandemic Influenza A (H1N1) in Mainland China.
- Author
-
Fang, Li-Qun, Wang, Li-Ping, de Vlas, Sake J., Liang, Song, Tong, Shi-Lu, Li, Yan-Li, Li, Ya-Pin, Qian, Quan, Yang, Hong, Zhou, Mai-Geng, Wang, Xiao-Feng, Richardus, Jan Hendrik, Ma, Jia-Qi, and Cao, Wu-Chun
- Subjects
H1N1 influenza ,AGE distribution ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CLIMATOLOGY ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,STATISTICAL correlation ,HEALTH facilities ,HUMIDITY ,MEDICAL informatics ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,POISSON distribution ,POPULATION geography ,RESEARCH funding ,SCHOOLS ,STATISTICS ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,TEMPERATURE ,TIME ,TRANSPORTATION ,TRAVEL ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,DISEASE incidence ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INFLUENZA ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Data from all reported cases of 2009 pandemic influenza A (H1N1) were obtained from the China Information System for Disease Control and Prevention. The spatiotemporal distribution patterns of cases were characterized through spatial analysis. The impact of travel-related risk factors on invasion of the disease was analyzed using survival analysis, and climatic factors related to local transmission were identified using multilevel Poisson regression, both at the county level. The results showed that the epidemic spanned a large geographic area, with the most affected areas being in western China. Significant differences in incidence were found among age groups, with incidences peaking in school-age children. Overall, the epidemic spread from southeast to northwest. Proximity to airports and being intersected by national highways or freeways but not railways were variables associated with the presence of the disease in a county. Lower temperature and lower relative humidity were the climatic factors facilitating local transmission after correction for the effects of school summer vacation and public holidays, as well as population density and the density of medical facilities. These findings indicate that interventions focused on domestic travel, population density, and climatic factors could play a role in mitigating the public health impact of future influenza pandemics. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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