Publication | Open Access
Molecular epidemiology of an enterovirus A71 outbreak associated with severe neurological disease, Spain, 2016
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Citations
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References
2019
Year
Virus EpidemiologyMolecular EpidemiologyPathologySevere Neurological DiseaseCovid-19Severe Neurological ManifestationsEv-a71 OutbreakGastrointestinal VirusEmerging Infectious DiseaseVirus PhylogenyDiagnostic VirologyInfectious Disease EpidemiologyIntroductionenterovirus A71NeurovirologyVirologyEnterovirus A71 OutbreakVirus ClassificationCommon DiseasesEpidemiologyEmerging Infectious DiseasesPathogenesisEmergent VirusMedicine
IntroductionEnterovirus A71 (EV-A71) is an emerging pathogen that causes a wide range of disorders including severe neurological manifestations. In the past 20 years, this virus has been associated with large outbreaks of hand, foot and mouth disease with neurological complications in the Asia-Pacific region, while in Europe mainly sporadic cases have been reported. In spring 2016, however, an EV-A71 outbreak associated with severe neurological cases was reported in Catalonia and spread further to other Spanish regions.AimOur objective was to investigate the epidemiology and clinical characteristics of the outbreak.MethodsWe carried out a retrospective study which included 233 EV-A71-positive samples collected during 2016 from hospitalised patients. We analysed the clinical manifestations associated with EV-A71 infections and performed phylogenetic analyses of the 3'-VP1 and 3Dpol regions from all Spanish strains and a set of EV-A71 from other countries.ResultsMost EV-A71 infections were reported in children (mean age: 2.6 years) and the highest incidence was between May and July 2016 (83%). Most isolates (218/233) were classified as subgenogroup C1 and 217 of them were grouped in one cluster phylogenetically related to a new recombinant variant strain associated with severe neurological diseases in Germany and France in 2015 and 2016. Moreover, we found a clear association of EV-A71-C1 infection with severe neurological disorders, brainstem encephalitis being the most commonly reported.ConclusionAn emerging recombinant variant of EV-A71-C1 was responsible for the large outbreak in 2016 in Spain that was associated with many severe neurological cases.
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