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The First Identification and Retrospective Study of Severe Fever With Thrombocytopenia Syndrome in Japan

Authors :
Yojiro Kawabe
Masaru Okuda
Shigeru Kohno
Hitomi Fukumoto
Yuko Sato
Shigeru Morikawa
Takanori Hosokawa
Takayuki Tominaga
Kazuko Doi
Masayuki Shimojima
Hideki Tani
Tsutomu Omatsu
Shuetsu Fukushi
Noriko Nakajima
Tetsuya Mizutani
Yukie Katayama
Toshiaki Kamei
Kensuke Nakajima
Tadaki Suzuki
Masayuki Saijo
Hideki Hasegawa
Takenori Sakai
Tomoki Yoshikawa
Momoko Ogata
Takanori Senba
Ichiro Kurane
Toru Takahashi
Kazunori Oishi
Harutaka Katano
Masaki Yasukawa
Aki Ishido
Kazunori Umeki
Toru Shigeoka
Aiko Fukuma
Daisuke Ninomiya
Akira Satoh
Masaharu Miyahara
Masahito Ijuin
Shozo Kaneyuki
Tomoya Saito
Shintaro Kurihara
Taichi Azuma
Shota Sakaguchi
Takuya Yamagishi
Kazuko Fukushima
Koichiro Suemori
Masahiro Honda
Ken Maeda
Koichi Izumikawa
Noriyo Nagata
Source :
Europe PubMed Central, The Journal of Infectious Diseases
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2013.

Abstract

Background. Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is caused by SFTS virus (SFTSV), a novel bunyavirus reported to be endemic in central and northeastern China. This article describes the first identified patient with SFTS and a retrospective study on SFTS in Japan. Methods. Virologic and pathologic examinations were performed on the patient's samples. Laboratory diagnosis of SFTS was made by isolation/genome amplification and/or the detection of anti-SFTSV immunoglobulin G antibody in sera. Physicians were alerted to the initial diagnosis and asked whether they had previously treated patients with symptoms similar to those of SFTS. Results. A female patient who died in 2012 received a diagnosis of SFTS. Ten additional patients with SFTS were then retrospectively identified. All patients were aged ≥50 years and lived in western Japan. Six cases were fatal. The ratio of males to females was 8:3. SFTSV was isolated from 8 patients. Phylogenetic analyses indicated that all of the Japanese SFTSV isolates formed a genotype independent to those from China. Most patients showed symptoms due to hemorrhage, possibly because of disseminated intravascular coagulation and/or hemophagocytosis. Conclusions. SFTS has been endemic to Japan, and SFTSV has been circulating naturally within the country.

Details

ISSN :
15376613 and 00221899
Volume :
209
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5ff0f40a8bc1d938ca91ce31c381b068
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jit603