Seroprevalence of EV-a71 neutralizing antibodies following the 2011 epidemic in HCMC, Vietnam

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Abstract

Enterovirus-A71 (EV-A71) cyclically causes hand-foot-mouth disease (HFMD) epidemics in Asian children. An EV-A71 epidemic occurred in Southern Vietnam in 2011, but its scale is not clear. We collected residual sera from non-HFMD Vietnamese inpatients in 2012–2013 to determine seroprevalence of EV-A71 neutralizing antibodies, and measured cross-reac-tive neutralizing antibody titers against three EV-A71 genogroups. About 23.5% of 1-year-old children in Southern Vietnam has been infected by EV-A71, and the median age of infection was estimated to be 3 years. No significant antigenic variation could be detected among the three EV-A71 genogroups. The high seroprevalence of EV-A71 neutralizing antibody in children living in southern Vietnam indicates the necessity of introducing EV-A71 vaccines in southern Vietnam, particularly for children under 6 months of age. Moreover, it is critical to understand EV-A71 disease burden for formulating national vaccination policy.

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Kuo, F. L., Khanh, T. H., Chung, W. Y., Hung, N. T., Luo, S. T., Chang, W. C., … Lee, M. S. (2020). Seroprevalence of EV-a71 neutralizing antibodies following the 2011 epidemic in HCMC, Vietnam. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 14(3). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008124

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