15 research outputs found

    Low seroprevalence of COVID-19 in Lao PDR, late 2020

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    Background In 2020 Lao PDR had low reported COVID-19 cases but it was unclear whether this masked silent transmission. A seroprevalence study was done August - September 2020 to determine SARS-CoV-2 exposure. Methods Participants were from the general community (n=2433) or healthcare workers (n=666) in five provinces and bat/wildlife contacts (n=74) were from Vientiane province. ELISAs detected anti- SARS-CoV-2 Nucleoprotein (N; n=3173 tested) and Spike (S; n=1417 tested) antibodies. Double-positive samples were checked by IgM/IgG rapid tests. Controls were confirmed COVID-19 cases (n=15) and pre-COVID-19 samples (n=265). Seroprevalence for the general community was weighted to account for complex survey sample design, age and sex. Findings In pre-COVID-19 samples, 5·3%, [95% CI=3·1-8·7%] were anti-N antibody single-positive and 1·1% [0·3-3·5%] were anti-S antibody single positive. None were double positive. Anti-N and anti-S antibodies were detected in 5·2% [4·2-6·5%] and 2·1% [1·1-3·9%] of the general community, 2·0% [1·1-3·3%] and 1·4% [0·5-3·7%] of healthcare workers and 20·3% [12·6-31·0%] and 6·8% [2·8-15·3%] of bat/wildlife contacts. 0·1% [0·02-0·3%] were double positive for anti-N and anti-S antibodies (rapid test negative). Interpretation We find no evidence for significant SARS-CoV-2 circulation in Lao PDR before September 2020. This likely results from early decisive measures taken by the government, social behavior, and low population density. High anti-N /low anti-S seroprevalence in bat/wildlife contacts may indicate exposure to cross-reactive animal coronaviruses with threat of emerging novel viruses. Funding Agence Française de Développement. Additional; Institut Pasteur du Laos, Institute Pasteur, Paris and Luxembourg Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs (“PaReCIDS II”)

    Les fièvres typhoïdes et paratyphoïdes en pédiatrie (à propos de 45 cas dans un hôpital parisien)

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    Les fièvres typhoïdes et paratyphoïdes sont rares en France et sont principalement des cas d importation. Chez l enfant, les données émanent surtout d études réalisées en zone d endémie.Nous rapportons une analyse rétrospective des cas de fièvre entérique pris en charge dans un hôpital pédiatrique parisien entre 1993 et 2011.Parmi 45 cas, 80 % étaient des cas d importation. Soixante-trois pourcent des patients avaient séjourné en Afrique et 34 % dans le sous-continent indien pendant une durée médiane de 8 semaines (IQ 5,6-8,9), pour rendre visite à leur famille dans 86 % des cas. Une fièvre associée à des signes digestifs était retrouvée chez 95 % des patients, 70 % avaient une élévation des transaminases et 89 % une CRP élevée. Les souches de S typhi (n=40) et S paratyphi (n=5) n étaient pas différentiables cliniquement et biologiquement. L hémoculture était positive dans 89 % des cas. Dix souches étaient résistantes dont 9 provenant du sous-continent indien. Huit avaient une sensibilité diminuée aux fluoroquinolones et 1 était résistante à la ciprofloxacine. La présentation clinique, biologique et l évolution des infections liées à ces souches n étaient pas différentes de celles des souches sensibles. La ceftriaxone était utilisée dans 41 cas pour une durée médiane de 6 jours (IQ 4-8,5). Huit patients présentaient des complications et aucun échec thérapeutique n était observé.Les fièvres entériques sont observées principalement au retour d un séjour prolongé en zone tropicale. Les signes cliniques et paracliniques sont peu spécifiques et ces fièvres peuvent être sévères chez l enfant. L évolution des profils de résistance soulève des questions thérapeutiques.PARIS6-Bibl.Pitié-Salpêtrie (751132101) / SudocSudocFranceF

    First probable case of congenital Zika syndrome in Lao People’s Democratic Republic

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    International audienceZika virus (ZIKV) is a Flavivirus transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes, and was responsible for a worldwide outbreak between 2013 and 2016. However, no ZIKV outbreak has been described in Southeast Asia since 2017. In this study, we report the first microcephaly case with probable ZIKV infection during pregnancy in Lao People's Democratic Republic

    Heterogeneous distribution of k13 mutations in Plasmodium falciparum in Laos

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    Abstract Background The emergence and transnational spread of artemisinin resistance in Plasmodium falciparum in the Greater Mekong Sub-region (GMS) is a serious threat to malaria elimination in the region and could present a threat to malaria control in Africa. Recently, the Lao Government adopted the goal of malaria elimination by 2030, for which monitoring of artemisinin-resistant malaria within the country is indispensable. This study’s objectives were to assess the distribution of k13 mutations in Laos. Methods Plasmodium falciparum isolates (n = 1151) were collected from five southern provinces in Laos between 2015 and 2016, and three isolates from the northernmost province bordering China in 2017. Polymorphisms of the k13 gene and two flanking regions were analysed to estimate relationship among the isolates. Results In the five southern provinces, overall 55.5% of the isolates possessed artemisinin-resistant mutations of the k13 gene (C580Y, P574L, R539T, Y493H). The C580Y was the predominant mutation (87.2%). The frequencies of the k13 mutations were heterogeneous in the five southern provinces, but with a clear tendency showing the highest frequency in the south (72.5%) and to a lower degree when moving northward (28.0%). The three isolates from the Lao–Chinese border also possessed the C580Y mutation. Analysis of the flanking loci demonstrated that these three isolates were genetically very close to resistant strains originating from western Cambodia. Conclusions Artemisinin resistance was observed to be rapidly increasing and spreading northwards through Laos and has now reached the Chinese border. The Lao and Chinese governments, as well as the international community, should make dedicated efforts to contain the spread of k13 mutations within Laos and in the GMS

    Findings in Patients From Benin With Osteomyelitis and Polymerase Chain Reaction–Confirmed Mycobacterium ulcerans Infection

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    International audienceBackground. Mycobacterium ulcerans is known to cause Buruli ulcer (BU), a necrotizing skin disease leading to extensive cutaneous and subcutaneous destruction and functional limitations. However, M. ulcerans infections are not limited to skin, and osteomyelitis, still poorly described in the literature, occurs in numerous young patients in Africa.Methods. In a retrospective matched case-control study conducted in a highly endemic area in Benin, we analyzed demographic, clinical, biological, and radiological features in all patients with M. ulcerans infections with bone involvement, identified from a cohort of 1257 patients with polymerase chain reaction–proved M. ulcerans infections. Results. The 81 patients studied had a median age of 11 years (interquartile range, 7–16 years) and were predominantly male (male–female ratio, 2:1). Osteomyelitis was observed beneath active BU lesions (60.5%) or at a distance from active or apparently healed BU lesions (14.8%) but also in patients without a history of BU skin lesions (24.7%). These lesions had an insidious course, with nonspecific clinical findings leading to delayed diagnosis. A comparison with findings in 243 age- and sex-matched patients with BU without osteomyelitis showed that case patients were less likely to have received BCG immunization than controls (33.3% vs 52.7%; P = .01). They were also at higher risk of longer hospital stay (118 vs 69 days; P = .001), surgery (92.6% vs 63.0%; P = .001), and long-term crippling sequelae (55.6% vs 15.2%; P < .001). Conclusions. This study highlighted the difficulties associated with diagnosis of M. ulcerans osteomyelitis, with one-fourth of patients having no apparent history of BU skin lesions, including during the current course of illness. Delays in treatment contributed to the high proportion (55.6%) of patients with crippling sequelae

    Trends of the Dengue Serotype-4 Circulation with Epidemiological, Phylogenetic, and Entomological Insights in Lao PDR between 2015 and 2019

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    International audienceDengue outbreaks have regularly been recorded in Lao People's Democratic Republic (PDR) since the first detection of the disease in 1979. In 2012, an integrated arbovirus surveillance network was set up in Lao PDR and an entomological surveillance has been implemented since 2016 in Vientiane Capital. Here, we report a study combining epidemiological, phylogenetic, and entomological analyzes during the largest DENV-4 epidemic ever recorded in Lao PDR (2015-2019). Strikingly, from 2015 to 2019, we reported the DENV-4 emergence and spread at the country level after two large epidemics predominated by DENV-3 and DENV-1, respectively, in 2012-2013 and 2015. Our data revealed a significant difference in the median age of the patient infected by DENV-4 compared to the other serotypes. Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated the circulation of DENV-4 Genotype I at the country level since at least 2013. The entomological surveillance showed a predominance of Aedes aegypti compared to Aedes albopictus and high abundance of these vectors in dry and rainy seasons between 2016 and 2019, in Vientiane Capital. Overall, these results emphasized the importance of an integrated approach to evaluate factors, which could impact the circulation and the epidemiological profile of dengue viruses, especially in endemic countries like Lao PDR
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