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Estimation of the incidence of severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome in high endemic areas in China: an inpatient-based retrospective study.

Authors :
Xiaoxia Huang
Shiwen Wang
Xianjun Wang
Yong Lyu
Mei Jiang
Deying Chen
Kaichun Li
Jingyu Liu
Shaoyu Xie
Tao Lyu
Jie Sun
Pengpeng Xu
Minghua Cao
Mifang Liang
Dexin Li
Huang, Xiaoxia
Wang, Shiwen
Wang, Xianjun
Lyu, Yong
Jiang, Mei
Source :
BMC Infectious Diseases; 2/5/2018, Vol. 18, p1-7, 7p, 5 Charts, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is a severe viral disease caused by SFTSV. It is important to estimate the rate of missed SFTS diagnosis and to further understand the actual incidence in high endemic areas in China.<bold>Methods: </bold>This study was conducted in two high SFTS endemic provinces in 2015. Patients hospitalized in 2014 or within 1 year before investigation were selected after considering their clinical manifestations, specifically, fever, platelet, and white blood cell. During retrospective investigation, sera were collected to detect SFTSV antibodies to assess SFTSV infection. To further understand SFTSV infection, acute phase sera were detected; SFTSV infection rate among a healthy population was also investigated to determine the basic infection level.<bold>Results: </bold>In total, 246 hospitalized cases were included, including 83 cases (33.7%) with fever, thrombocytopenia and leukopenia, 38 cases (15.4%) with fever and thrombocytopenia but without leukopenia, and 125 cases (50.8%) without fever but with thrombocytopenia and leukopenia. In total, 13 patients (5.3%) were SFTSV IgM antibody-positive, 48 (19.5%) were IgG-positive. Of the 13 IgM-positive cases, 11 (84.6%) were IgG-positive (9 with titres ≥1:400). Seropositive rates of antibodies were high (8.4% for IgM and 30.1% for IgG) in patients with fever, thrombocytopenia and leukopenia. Furthermore, among IgG-positive cases in this group, 76% (19/25) of patients' IgG antibody titres were ≥1:400. Additionally, 28 of 246 cases were initially diagnosed with suspected SFTS and were then excluded, and 218 patients were never diagnosed with SFTS; the seropositive rates of IgM and IgG in these two groups were 25% and 67.9% and 2.8% and 13.3%, respectively. These rates were 64.3% and 21.4% in 14 sera collected during acute phase of the 28 cases mentioned above. Seropositive rate of SFTSV IgG was only 1.3% in the patient-matched healthy group, and no IgM antibody was detected. A preliminary estimate of 8.3% of SFTS cases were missed in SFTS high endemic provinces.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>The actual SFTS incidence was underestimated. Effective measures such as adding a new SFTS case category - "SFTS clinical diagnosis cases" or using serological detection methods during acute phase should be considered to avoid missed diagnoses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712334
Volume :
18
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
BMC Infectious Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
127809953
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-018-2970-7