Data from: Long-term persistence of monotypic dengue transmission in small size isolated populations, French Polynesia, 1978-2014
Understanding the transition of epidemic to endemic dengue transmission remains a challenge in regions where serotypes co-circulate and there is extensive human mobility. French Polynesia, an isolated group of 72 inhabited islands, distributed among five geographically separated subdivisions, has re...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding the transition of epidemic to endemic dengue transmission
remains a challenge in regions where serotypes co-circulate and there is
extensive human mobility. French Polynesia, an isolated group of 72
inhabited islands, distributed among five geographically separated
subdivisions, has recorded mono-serotype epidemics since 1944, with long
inter-epidemic periods of circulation. Laboratory confirmed cases have
been recorded since 1978, enabling exploration of dengue epidemiology
under monotypic conditions in an isolated, spatially structured
geographical location. A database was constructed of confirmed dengue
cases, geolocated to island for a 35-year period. Statistical analyses of
viral establishment, persistence and fade-out as well as synchrony among
subdivisions were performed. Seven monotypic and one heterotypic dengue
epidemic occurred, followed by low-level viral circulation with a
recrudescent epidemic occurring on one occasion. Incidence was
asynchronous among the subdivisions. Complete viral die-out occurred on
several occasions with invasion of a new serotype, but also in the absence
of any novel serotype. Island population size had a strong impact on the
establishment, persistence and fade-out of dengue cases and endemicity was
estimated achievable only at a population size in excess of 175 000.
Despite island remoteness and low population size, dengue cases were
observed somewhere in French Polynesia almost constantly, in part due to
the spatial structuration generating asynchrony among subdivisions.
Long-term persistence of dengue virus in this group of island populations
may be enabled by island hopping, although could equally be explained by a
reservoir of sub-clinical infections on the most populated island, Tahiti. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.gk100m1 |