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An investig-ation into the epidemiology of chikungunya virus across neglected regions of Indonesia
Authors:Samuel C. B. Stubbs  Edison Johar  Frilasita A. Yudhaputri  Benediktus Yohan  Marsha S. Santoso  Rahma F. Hayati  Dionisius Denis  Barbara A. Blacklaws  Ann M. Powers  R. Tedjo Sasmono  Khin Saw Aye Myint  Simon D. W. Frost
Affiliation:1. University of Cambridge, Department of Veterinary Medicine, Cambridge, United Kingdom;2. Eijkman Institute for Molecular Biology, Jakarta, Indonesia;3. Division of Vector-Borne Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States of America;4. Microsoft Research, Redmond, Washington, United States of America;Fundacao Oswaldo Cruz, BRAZIL
Abstract:BackgroundChikungunya virus (CHIKV) is an important emerging and re-emerging public health problem worldwide. In Indonesia, where the virus is endemic, epidemiological information from outside of the main islands of Java and Bali is limited.Methodology/Principal FindingsFour hundred and seventy nine acutely febrile patients presenting between September 2017–2019 were recruited from three city hospitals situated in Ambon, Maluku; Banjarmasin, Kalimantan; and Batam, Batam Island as part of a multi-site observational study. CHIKV RNA was detected in a single serum sample while a separate sample was IgM positive. IgG seroprevalence was also low across all three sites, ranging from 1.4–3.2%. The single RT-PCR positive sample from this study and 24 archived samples collected during other recent outbreaks throughout Indonesia were subjected to complete coding region sequencing to assess the genetic diversity of Indonesian strains. Phylogenetic analysis revealed all to be of a single clade, which was distinct from CHIKV strains recently reported from neighbouring regions including the Philippines and the Pacific Islands.Conclusions/SignificanceChikungunya virus strains from recent outbreaks across Indonesia all belong to a single clade. However, low-level seroprevalence and molecular detection of CHIKV across the three study sites appears to contrast with the generally high seroprevalences that have been reported for non-outbreak settings in Java and Bali, and may account for the relative lack of CHIKV epidemiological data from other regions of Indonesia.
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