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Eurosurveillance
Since 1995, Eurosurveillance has provided the European public health community with an open-access platform to exchange relevant findings on communicable disease surveillance, prevention and control. A weekly, electronic, peer-reviewed publication, Eurosurveillance aims to provide timely facts and guidance for public health professionals and decision-makers in the field of infectious disease to facilitate the implementation of effective prevention and control measures. Impact factor: 9.9. More...
Latest Issue: Volume 30, Issue 2, 16 January 2025 Latest Issue RSS feed
- Surveillance
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Human neuroinvasive Toscana virus infections in Italy from 2016 to 2023: Increased incidence in 2022 and 2023
Emmanouil Alexandros Fotakis , Elisa Di Maggio , Martina Del Manso , Alberto Mateo-Urdiales , Daniele Petrone , Massimo Fabiani , Giulia Perego , Antonino Bella , Gioia Bongiorno , Ilaria Bernardini , Marco Di Luca , Giulietta Venturi , Claudia Fortuna , Stefania Giannitelli , Federica Ferraro , Francesco Maraglino , Patrizio Pezzotti , Anna Teresa Palamara , Flavia Riccardo and Italian Arbovirus Surveillance networkBackgroundToscana virus (TOSV) is transmitted to humans through bites of infected sand flies. Neuroinvasive TOSV infections are leading causes of meningitis/encephalitis in southern Europe and notifiable in Italy since 2016. In 2022–23, Italy experienced extreme climate anomalies and a concomitant increase in mosquito and tick-borne disease transmission.
AimTo identify the spatiotemporal distribution and risk groups of neuroinvasive TOSV infections in Italy in 2022–23 vs 2016–21.
MethodsWe retrospectively described all autochthonous, laboratory-confirmed neuroinvasive TOSV cases notified to the national surveillance system in 2016–23 using frequencies, proportions, incidences and incidence risk ratios (IRRs) with 95% CIs, stratified by year, sex, age, region/autonomous province (AP) of infection/exposure and infection/exposure municipality by urbanisation level.
ResultsIn 2022–23, 276 cases were notified (average annual incidence: 2.34/1,000,000 population) vs 331 cases in 2016–21 (0.92/1,000,000), with increased incidence extending into September. In 2022–23, infections were acquired in 12/21 regions/APs, predominantly in Emilia Romagna (57.6%; 159/276) as in 2016–21, including four regions/APs with no local infections in 2016–21. Similar to 2016–21, during 2022–23 residence in rural municipalities (vs urban), male sex, working age (19–67 years) and age > 67 years (vs ≤ 18 years) were identified as risk factors with IRRs of 2.89 (95% CI: 2.01–4.17), 2.17 (95% CI: 1.66–2.84), 5.31 (95% CI: 2.81–10.0) and 5.06 (95% CI: 2.59–9.86), respectively.
ConclusionItaly experienced a nearly 2.6-fold increase in neuroinvasive TOSV incidence in 2022–23 vs 2016–21. Raising public awareness on risk factors and personal protection measures may enhance prevention efforts.
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Trends in human parainfluenza virus in Scotland before and after the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic, January 2017 to October 2023
BackgroundHuman parainfluenza viruses (HPIV) commonly cause upper respiratory tract infections, with potential for severe lower respiratory complications. Understanding seasonal increases informs strategies to prevent HPIV spreading.
AimWe examined the impact of COVID-19 on HPIV epidemiological and clinical patterns in Scotland using non-sentinel and sentinel surveillance data.
MethodsInformation on HPIV swab positivity (January 2017–October 2023) and demographic data was obtained from the Electronic Communication of Surveillance in Scotland (ECOSS) non-sentinel surveillance sources (laboratory-based data from hospital and community) and the Community Acute Respiratory Infection (CARI) sentinel surveillance programme (enhanced surveillance and symptom data).
ResultsIn 2020 during early COVID-19 waves, HPIV detection decreased aligning with lockdowns and preventive measures. In summer 2021, HPIV positivity increased, with HPIV-3 possibly reverting to pre-pandemic seasonality, but HPIV-1 not yet re-establishing alternate-year peaks. Most positive results from non-sentinel sources came from hospital tests. Sentinel surveillance (CARI) complemented non-sentinel data, offering community-level insights. There was no significant difference in CARI swab positivity by sex in any age group. Consistent with historical trends, children under five years exhibited highest test positivity: 9.3% (95% CI: 7.6–11.2) in females and 8.5% (95% CI 7.0–10.2) in males.
ConclusionThe COVID-19 pandemic impacted HPIV detection in Scotland. The decline during the pandemic peak and subsequent partial resurgence underscores the complex interplay between viral epidemiology and public health measures. Combining diverse surveillance systems provides a comprehensive understanding of HPIV dynamics. Insights into age-specific and symptom-associated patterns contribute to understanding HPIV epidemiology and refining public health strategies.
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