Serologic evidence of human orthopoxvirus infections in Sierra Leone

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Abstract

Background: Orthopoxviruses, including variola virus, vaccinia virus, and monkeypox virus, have previously been documented in humans in West Africa, however, no cases of human orthopoxvirus infection have been reported in the region since 1986. We conducted a serosurvey to determine whether human exposure to orthopoxviruses continues to occur in eastern Sierra Leone. Findings. To examine evidence of exposure to orthopoxviruses in the Kenema District of Sierra Leone, we collected and tested sera from 1596 persons by IgG ELISA and a subset of 313 by IgM capture ELISA. Eleven persons born after the cessation of smallpox vaccination had high orthopoxvirus-specific IgG values, and an additional 6 persons had positive IgM responses. No geographic clustering was noted. Conclusions: These data suggest that orthopoxviruses continue to circulate in Sierra Leone. Studies aimed at obtaining orthopoxvirus isolates and/or genetic sequences from rodents and symptomatic humans in the area are indicated. © 2011 MacNeil et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

Figures

  • Figure 1 Location of Sierra Leone in West Africa (A), location of Kenema district in Sierra Leone (B), and location of study villages in Kenema district (C). In figure 1B, the star denotes the capitol (Freetown) and the open circle denotes the location of a confirmed monkeypox case in 1970.
  • Figure 2 Distribution of IgG OD-COVs of all study participants (n = 1596).
  • Figure 3 Distribution of IgG OD-COVs of persons born before (29 years or older, n = 670) and after (28 years or younger, n = 866) the eradication of smallpox in Sierra Leone. Values on the y-axis represent the percentage of persons in the age group with IgG OD-COVs falling within the plotted range.

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APA

MacNeil, A., Abel, J., Reynolds, M. G., Lash, R., Fonnie, R., Kanneh, L. D., … Bausch, D. G. (2011). Serologic evidence of human orthopoxvirus infections in Sierra Leone. BMC Research Notes, 4. https://doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-4-465

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