寨卡病毒
废水
灭蚊
传输(电信)
环境卫生
病毒学
兽医学
医学
环境科学
环境工程
病毒
病理
工程类
电信
疟疾
作者
Judith Chui Ching Wong,Matthew Zirui Tay,Hapuarachchige Chanditha Hapuarachchi,Benjamin Lee,Gladys Yeo,Dzulkhairul Maliki,Winston Lee,Nur-Afidah Mohamed Suhaimi,Kaiyun Chio,Wilson Cheong Huat Tan,Lee Ching Ng
出处
期刊:EBioMedicine
[Elsevier BV]
日期:2024-03-01
卷期号:101: 105020-105020
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.ebiom.2024.105020
摘要
Summary
Background
In June 2023, a local cluster of 15 Zika cases was reported in a neighbourhood in Northeastern Singapore. The last significant local transmission of Zika virus (ZIKV) with more than 450 cases was in 2016–2017. To monitor the situation and mitigate further transmission, case, entomological and wastewater-based surveillance were carried out. Methods
Primary healthcare practitioners and the community were alerted to encourage timely case identification. Surveillance was enhanced through testing of Aedes mosquitoes collected from the National Gravitrap surveillance system, and wastewater samples were collected from a network of autosamplers deployed at manholes across the country. Findings
ZIKV RNA was detected in mosquito pools (3/43; 7%) and individual mosquitoes (3/82; 3.7%) captured, and in wastewater samples (13/503) collected from the vicinity of the cluster of cases. Respective samples collected from other sites across the country were negative. The peak detection of ZIKV RNA in mosquitoes and wastewater coincided temporally with the peak in the number of cases in the area (15–25 May 2023). Interpretation
The restriction of ZIKV signals from wastewater and mosquitoes within the neighbourhood suggested limited ZIKV transmission. The subsequent waning of signals suggested effectiveness of control measures. We demonstrate the utility of wastewater-based surveillance of ZIKV, which complements existing case- and entomological-based surveillance. The non-intrusive approach is particularly useful to monitor diseases such as Zika, which generally causes silent or mild infections, but may cause severe outcomes such as congenital Zika syndrome. Funding
This study was funded by Singapore's Ministry of Finance and the National Environment Agency, Singapore.
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