An assessment of public health surveillance of Zika virus infection and potentially associated outcomes in Latin America

Abstract Background We evaluated whether outbreaks of Zika virus (ZIKV) infection, newborn microcephaly, and Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) in Latin America may be detected through current surveillance systems, and how cases detected through surveillance may increase health care burden. Methods We es...

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Main Authors: Leonelo E. Bautista, Víctor M. Herrera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-05-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-018-5566-7
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spelling doaj-36100906be254182a7096b8dee6fa89e2020-11-25T00:23:37ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582018-05-0118111010.1186/s12889-018-5566-7An assessment of public health surveillance of Zika virus infection and potentially associated outcomes in Latin AmericaLeonelo E. Bautista0Víctor M. Herrera1Department of Population Health Sciences, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin at MadisonCenter for Biomedical Research, Universidad Autónoma de BucaramangaAbstract Background We evaluated whether outbreaks of Zika virus (ZIKV) infection, newborn microcephaly, and Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) in Latin America may be detected through current surveillance systems, and how cases detected through surveillance may increase health care burden. Methods We estimated the sensitivity and specificity of surveillance case definitions using published data. We assumed a 10% ZIKV infection risk during a non-outbreak period and hypothetical increases in risk during an outbreak period. We used sensitivity and specificity estimates to correct for non-differential misclassification, and calculated a misclassification-corrected relative risk comparing both periods. To identify the smallest hypothetical increase in risk resulting in a detectable outbreak we compared the misclassification-corrected relative risk to the relative risk corresponding to the upper limit of the endemic channel (mean + 2 SD). We also estimated the proportion of false positive cases detected during the outbreak. We followed the same approach for microcephaly and GBS, but assumed the risk of ZIKV infection doubled during the outbreak, and ZIKV infection increased the risk of both diseases. Results ZIKV infection outbreaks were not detectable through non-serological surveillance. Outbreaks were detectable through serologic surveillance if infection risk increased by at least 10%, but more than 50% of all cases were false positive. Outbreaks of severe microcephaly were detected if ZIKV infection increased prevalence of this condition by at least 24.0 times. When ZIKV infection did not increase the prevalence of severe microcephaly, 34.7 to 82.5% of all cases were false positive, depending on diagnostic accuracy. GBS outbreaks were detected if ZIKV infection increased the GBS risk by at least seven times. For optimal GBS diagnosis accuracy, the proportion of false positive cases ranged from 29 to 54% and from 45 to 56% depending on the incidence of GBS mimics. Conclusions Current surveillance systems have a low probability of detecting outbreaks of ZIKV infection, severe microcephaly, and GBS, and could result in significant increases in health care burden, due to the detection of large numbers of false positive cases. In view of these limitations, Latin American countries should consider alternative options for surveillance.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-018-5566-7
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Leonelo E. Bautista
Víctor M. Herrera
spellingShingle Leonelo E. Bautista
Víctor M. Herrera
An assessment of public health surveillance of Zika virus infection and potentially associated outcomes in Latin America
BMC Public Health
author_facet Leonelo E. Bautista
Víctor M. Herrera
author_sort Leonelo E. Bautista
title An assessment of public health surveillance of Zika virus infection and potentially associated outcomes in Latin America
title_short An assessment of public health surveillance of Zika virus infection and potentially associated outcomes in Latin America
title_full An assessment of public health surveillance of Zika virus infection and potentially associated outcomes in Latin America
title_fullStr An assessment of public health surveillance of Zika virus infection and potentially associated outcomes in Latin America
title_full_unstemmed An assessment of public health surveillance of Zika virus infection and potentially associated outcomes in Latin America
title_sort assessment of public health surveillance of zika virus infection and potentially associated outcomes in latin america
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Abstract Background We evaluated whether outbreaks of Zika virus (ZIKV) infection, newborn microcephaly, and Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) in Latin America may be detected through current surveillance systems, and how cases detected through surveillance may increase health care burden. Methods We estimated the sensitivity and specificity of surveillance case definitions using published data. We assumed a 10% ZIKV infection risk during a non-outbreak period and hypothetical increases in risk during an outbreak period. We used sensitivity and specificity estimates to correct for non-differential misclassification, and calculated a misclassification-corrected relative risk comparing both periods. To identify the smallest hypothetical increase in risk resulting in a detectable outbreak we compared the misclassification-corrected relative risk to the relative risk corresponding to the upper limit of the endemic channel (mean + 2 SD). We also estimated the proportion of false positive cases detected during the outbreak. We followed the same approach for microcephaly and GBS, but assumed the risk of ZIKV infection doubled during the outbreak, and ZIKV infection increased the risk of both diseases. Results ZIKV infection outbreaks were not detectable through non-serological surveillance. Outbreaks were detectable through serologic surveillance if infection risk increased by at least 10%, but more than 50% of all cases were false positive. Outbreaks of severe microcephaly were detected if ZIKV infection increased prevalence of this condition by at least 24.0 times. When ZIKV infection did not increase the prevalence of severe microcephaly, 34.7 to 82.5% of all cases were false positive, depending on diagnostic accuracy. GBS outbreaks were detected if ZIKV infection increased the GBS risk by at least seven times. For optimal GBS diagnosis accuracy, the proportion of false positive cases ranged from 29 to 54% and from 45 to 56% depending on the incidence of GBS mimics. Conclusions Current surveillance systems have a low probability of detecting outbreaks of ZIKV infection, severe microcephaly, and GBS, and could result in significant increases in health care burden, due to the detection of large numbers of false positive cases. In view of these limitations, Latin American countries should consider alternative options for surveillance.
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-018-5566-7
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