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Rotavirus-associated acute diarrhea outbreak in West Shewa Zone of Oromia Regional State, Ethiopia, 2017

Authors :
Abyot Bekele Woyessa
Almaz Abebe
Berhane Beyene
Mesfin Tefera
Esete Assefa
Hiwot Ketema
Birke Teshome
Ayenachew Bekele
Yohanis Dugasa
Shambel Habebe
Zewdu Assefa
Diriba Sufa
Dagnachew Alemu
Habtamu Tilahun
Mengistu Biru
Gemechu Shume
Source :
The Pan African Medical Journal, Vol 32, Iss 202 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
The Pan African Medical Journal, 2019.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Rotavirus causes severe-diarrheal diseases in infants. An estimation of 138 million rotavirus-associated diarrheal cases and 215,000 deaths occur every year globally. In December 2016, West-Shewa zone in Ethiopia reported unidentified gastrointestinal diarrhea outbreak. We investigated to identify the causative agent of the outbreak to support response operations. METHODS: Medical records were reviewed, and the daily line list was collected from health facilities. Descriptive data analysis was done by time, person and place. Stool specimens were first tested by antigen capture enzyme immunoassay (EIA) technique and further confirmed by reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) as a gold standard. The product of RT-PCR was genotyped for each gene using G1-G4, G8-G9 and G12 primers for VP7 gene and P(4), P(6), P(8) and P(14) primers for VP4 gene. RESULTS: A total of 1,987 diarrheal cases (5.7 per 1000) and five deaths (case-fatality rate 0.25%) were identified and epidemiologically-linked to confirmed rotavirus from December 2016 to February 2017. Among the cases, 1,946 (98%) were 5 children. Fourteen (74%) of the 19 tested stool specimens were positive for rotavirus by EIA and RT-PCR. Majority of strains detected were G12P(6) (25%) and G-negative P(8) (25%) followed by G9P(8) (19%), G1P(8) (13%) and G3/G2 P(8), G12P(8), and G-negative P(6) (6% each). CONCLUSIONS: Diarrheal outbreak which occurred in West-Shewa zone of Ethiopia was associated with rotavirus and relatively more affected districts with low vaccination coverage. Routine rotavirus vaccination quality and coverage should be evaluated and the surveillance system needs to be strengthened to detect, prevent and control a similar outbreak.

Details

Language :
English, French
ISSN :
19378688
Volume :
32
Issue :
202
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Pan African Medical Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2b24cb05a5124ed3aa11a622c4a6eb7f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2019.32.202.18188