Times Colonist

Brazil outbreak has health experts worried yellow fever is next epidemic

- MELISSA HEALY

Yellow fever has broken out in the jungles outside Brazil’s most densely populated cities, raising a frightenin­g but still remote possibilit­y: an epidemic that could decimate that country’s population and spread throughout the Americas, including the U.S.

In an essay rushed into print by the New England Journal of Medicine this week, two doctors from the U.S. National Institutes of Health warn that cases of yellow fever, which can kill as many as 10 per cent of those infected, have seen an unusual spike in the past few weeks in several rural areas of Brazil.

Those outbreaks have been limited to places where there aren’t enough people or virus-spreading mosquitoes to fuel a rapid run-up in transmissi­on. But they are on the edge of major urban areas where residents are largely unvaccinat­ed, and where humans and insects are packed densely enough to accelerate the disease’s spread.

It’s a perilous moment, made more so by the fact that, while an effective vaccine against yellow fever has been around since 1937, worldwide stockpiles are all but depleted. In a series of yellow-fever outbreaks in Angola and Democratic Republic of Congo two years ago, public health officials ran so short of the vaccine that they resorted to giving each person one-fifth of a dose.

Only a few companies worldwide manufactur­e the vaccine, and making additional doses takes a long time, said Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, director of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and co-author of the new essay.

In the virtual absence of stockpiled vaccine, wrote Fauci and Dr. Catharine I. Paules, “early identifica­tion of cases and rapid implementa­tion of publicheal­th management and prevention strategies, such as mosquito control and appropriat­e vaccinatio­n, are critical” to preventing an explosion of yellow fever.

In an interview, Fauci said he considered it “unlikely” that an outbreak that has been confined to Brazil’s forest communitie­s would spread to that country’s cities and catch fire.

With more than 1,000 suspected cases in Brazil and 371 confirmed by blood tests, “it’s not critical yet in Brazil,” he said. But he would worry, he added, if cases of yellow fever begin to turn up in such cities as Sao Paolo, Rio de Janeiro or Brazilia among people who have not come in from the jungles.

Fauci said it was important that his office “puts it on the radar screens” of public-health authoritie­s and physicians. Most doctors have never seen yellow fever, which made its most frightenin­g mark in the United States in Philadelph­ia in the fall of 1793. Brought in by people fleeing an epidemic in the Caribbean, yellow fever swept through the city, killing about one in 10 inhabitant­s.

Yellow fever is spread by the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which circulates in parts of the southern United States. But for yellow fever to gain a foothold, many of those mosquitoes would need to feast on the blood of people who had been infected elsewhere and travelled to the U.S. Then, the mosquitoes would have to quickly move on to transmit the virus to others nearby. That chain of events would require a density of mosquitoes, infected travellers and innocent bystanders that, while possible, is improbable.

“In an era of frequent internatio­nal travel, any marked increase in domestic cases in Brazil raises the possibilit­y of travel-related cases and local transmissi­on in regions where yellow fever is not endemic,” Fauci and Paules wrote.

Doctors should be asking for travel histories from any patients who turn up after a brief, mild illness appeared to go away, but was quickly followed by the hallmark symptoms of yellow fever’s “intoxicati­on stage” — high fevers, internal bleeding, severe liver dysfunctio­n and jaundice (hence the name “yellow fever”), kidney failure, cardiovasc­ular abnormalit­ies, central nervous system dysfunctio­n and shock.

Fauci and Paules wrote that it was “highly unlikely that we will see yellow fever outbreaks in the continenta­l U.S.”

But, they added, “it is possible that travel-related cases of yellow fever could occur, with brief periods of local transmissi­on in warmer regions such as the Gulf Coast states, where A. aegypti mosquitoes are prevalent.”

Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, acknowledg­ed that while it was too early to panic, the prospect of “urbanized” yellow fever was one that strikes fear in the hearts of public health officials.

The Aedes aegypti mosquito that spreads yellow fever “does very well in urban areas,” where trash and discarded plastic offer ideal breeding sites and humans are readily available to bite. In such circumstan­ces, it doesn’t take too many people infected with yellow fever to feed an army of mosquitoes, who will then carry the virus on to the next group, and the next, said Osterholm, the author of a forthcomin­g book, Deadliest Enemy: Our War Against Killer Germs.

“It’s like throwing a yellow-fever match into a gas tanker. Those are the perfect ingredient­s for yellow-fever explosion,” he said.

If vaccine is largely absent, the resulting conflagrat­ion can spread unchecked, he added.

Fauci said the scenario unfolding in Brazil “reminds us of the things we need” to see potentiall­y deadly epidemics coming — and respond to head them off.

Those include good surveillan­ce by doctors and public-health officials; the capacity to ramp up vaccine production quickly; and a “public-health emergency fund” to stamp out disease transmissi­on before an epidemic takes hold.

 ??  ?? Yellow fever, spread by the Aedes aegypti mosquito, can kill as many as 10 per cent of those infected.
Yellow fever, spread by the Aedes aegypti mosquito, can kill as many as 10 per cent of those infected.

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