Epidemiology of rubella virus cases in the pre-vaccination era of Ethiopia, 2009–2015

Abstract Background Rubella is a common mild rash illness caused by rubella virus. The majority of infections occur in children and young adults. The infection is the cause of a serious birth defect known as Congenital Rubella Syndrome (CRS) when a woman acquires infection early in pregnancy. Ethiop...

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Main Authors: Mekonen Getahun, Berhane Beyene, Kathleen Gallagher, Ayesheshem Ademe, Birke Teshome, Mesfin Tefera, Anjelo Asha, Aklog Afework, Esete Assefa, Yoseph HaileMariam, Yonas HaileGiorgis, Hiwot Ketema, Dejenie Shiferaw, Ayenachew Bekele, Daddi Jima, Amha Kebede
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2016-11-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-016-3841-z
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spelling doaj-b2bc89982ad7476580493696461481f72020-11-24T21:56:56ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582016-11-011611710.1186/s12889-016-3841-zEpidemiology of rubella virus cases in the pre-vaccination era of Ethiopia, 2009–2015Mekonen Getahun0Berhane Beyene1Kathleen Gallagher2Ayesheshem Ademe3Birke Teshome4Mesfin Tefera5Anjelo Asha6Aklog Afework7Esete Assefa8Yoseph HaileMariam9Yonas HaileGiorgis10Hiwot Ketema11Dejenie Shiferaw12Ayenachew Bekele13Daddi Jima14Amha Kebede15Ethiopian Public Health InstituteEthiopian Public Health InstituteWHO Country OfficeWHO Country OfficeEthiopian Public Health InstituteEthiopian Public Health InstituteEthiopian Public Health InstituteEthiopian Public Health InstituteEthiopian Public Health InstituteEthiopian Public Health InstituteWHO Country OfficeEthiopian Public Health InstituteEthiopian Public Health InstituteEthiopian Public Health InstituteEthiopian Public Health InstituteEthiopian Public Health InstituteAbstract Background Rubella is a common mild rash illness caused by rubella virus. The majority of infections occur in children and young adults. The infection is the cause of a serious birth defect known as Congenital Rubella Syndrome (CRS) when a woman acquires infection early in pregnancy. Ethiopia has not yet established rubella virus surveillance and has not yet introduced rubella vaccine into the routine immunization program. We characterize the epidemiology of laboratory confirmed rubella virus cases collected through measles surveillance from 2009 to 2015 to better understand the burden of the disease in the country. Methods A descriptive analysis was made to characterize rubella cases reported through the national measles case based surveillance system. The measles case definition was used to capture potential rubella cases. A suspected measles case was a person with generalized rash and fever with cough, or coryza or conjunctivitis. Those cases whose sera were negative for measles IgM antibodies were tested for rubella IgM antibody. A confirmed rubella case was a person who tested positive for rubella IgM. Only laboratory confirmed rubella cases were analyzed in this article. Results Between 2009 and 2015, a total of 28,284 serum/plasma samples were collected and tested for measles IgM antibody and 11,151 (39.4%) were found positive. A total of 17,066 measles IgM negative or indeterminate samples were tested for rubella virus IgM and 2615 (15.3%) were found positive during the same period. Of 2615 confirmed rubella cases, 52.2% were females. The age of confirmed cases ranged from one month to 42 years with a mean age of 7.3 years. Three-fourth of all confirmed rubella cases were aged less than 10 years. The number of laboratory confirmed rubella cases linearly increased from 83 in 2009 to 856 in 2013 but dropped to 222 and 319 in 2014 and 2015 respectively. Higher number of cases occurred in the hot dry season (January through June) and in the central and western part of Ethiopia with 127 lab-confirmed outbreaks in the study period. Conclusions Based on our analysis, rubella was found to be endemic throughout Ethiopia. Children below the age of 10 years were the most affected. The burden of rubella cases varied from year to year but had a seasonal peak in March. To better understand the magnitude of rubella prior to vaccine introduction, establishing rubella surveillance system, conducting sero-prevalence studies among child bearing age females and establishing CRS sentinel surveillance among young infants are critical.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-016-3841-zEthiopiaRubellaPre-vaccine era2009–2015
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mekonen Getahun
Berhane Beyene
Kathleen Gallagher
Ayesheshem Ademe
Birke Teshome
Mesfin Tefera
Anjelo Asha
Aklog Afework
Esete Assefa
Yoseph HaileMariam
Yonas HaileGiorgis
Hiwot Ketema
Dejenie Shiferaw
Ayenachew Bekele
Daddi Jima
Amha Kebede
spellingShingle Mekonen Getahun
Berhane Beyene
Kathleen Gallagher
Ayesheshem Ademe
Birke Teshome
Mesfin Tefera
Anjelo Asha
Aklog Afework
Esete Assefa
Yoseph HaileMariam
Yonas HaileGiorgis
Hiwot Ketema
Dejenie Shiferaw
Ayenachew Bekele
Daddi Jima
Amha Kebede
Epidemiology of rubella virus cases in the pre-vaccination era of Ethiopia, 2009–2015
BMC Public Health
Ethiopia
Rubella
Pre-vaccine era
2009–2015
author_facet Mekonen Getahun
Berhane Beyene
Kathleen Gallagher
Ayesheshem Ademe
Birke Teshome
Mesfin Tefera
Anjelo Asha
Aklog Afework
Esete Assefa
Yoseph HaileMariam
Yonas HaileGiorgis
Hiwot Ketema
Dejenie Shiferaw
Ayenachew Bekele
Daddi Jima
Amha Kebede
author_sort Mekonen Getahun
title Epidemiology of rubella virus cases in the pre-vaccination era of Ethiopia, 2009–2015
title_short Epidemiology of rubella virus cases in the pre-vaccination era of Ethiopia, 2009–2015
title_full Epidemiology of rubella virus cases in the pre-vaccination era of Ethiopia, 2009–2015
title_fullStr Epidemiology of rubella virus cases in the pre-vaccination era of Ethiopia, 2009–2015
title_full_unstemmed Epidemiology of rubella virus cases in the pre-vaccination era of Ethiopia, 2009–2015
title_sort epidemiology of rubella virus cases in the pre-vaccination era of ethiopia, 2009–2015
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2016-11-01
description Abstract Background Rubella is a common mild rash illness caused by rubella virus. The majority of infections occur in children and young adults. The infection is the cause of a serious birth defect known as Congenital Rubella Syndrome (CRS) when a woman acquires infection early in pregnancy. Ethiopia has not yet established rubella virus surveillance and has not yet introduced rubella vaccine into the routine immunization program. We characterize the epidemiology of laboratory confirmed rubella virus cases collected through measles surveillance from 2009 to 2015 to better understand the burden of the disease in the country. Methods A descriptive analysis was made to characterize rubella cases reported through the national measles case based surveillance system. The measles case definition was used to capture potential rubella cases. A suspected measles case was a person with generalized rash and fever with cough, or coryza or conjunctivitis. Those cases whose sera were negative for measles IgM antibodies were tested for rubella IgM antibody. A confirmed rubella case was a person who tested positive for rubella IgM. Only laboratory confirmed rubella cases were analyzed in this article. Results Between 2009 and 2015, a total of 28,284 serum/plasma samples were collected and tested for measles IgM antibody and 11,151 (39.4%) were found positive. A total of 17,066 measles IgM negative or indeterminate samples were tested for rubella virus IgM and 2615 (15.3%) were found positive during the same period. Of 2615 confirmed rubella cases, 52.2% were females. The age of confirmed cases ranged from one month to 42 years with a mean age of 7.3 years. Three-fourth of all confirmed rubella cases were aged less than 10 years. The number of laboratory confirmed rubella cases linearly increased from 83 in 2009 to 856 in 2013 but dropped to 222 and 319 in 2014 and 2015 respectively. Higher number of cases occurred in the hot dry season (January through June) and in the central and western part of Ethiopia with 127 lab-confirmed outbreaks in the study period. Conclusions Based on our analysis, rubella was found to be endemic throughout Ethiopia. Children below the age of 10 years were the most affected. The burden of rubella cases varied from year to year but had a seasonal peak in March. To better understand the magnitude of rubella prior to vaccine introduction, establishing rubella surveillance system, conducting sero-prevalence studies among child bearing age females and establishing CRS sentinel surveillance among young infants are critical.
topic Ethiopia
Rubella
Pre-vaccine era
2009–2015
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-016-3841-z
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