Global burden of chikungunya virus infections and the potential benefit of vaccination campaigns
Author | Ribeiro dos Santos, Gabriel |
Author | Jawed, Fariha |
Author | Mukandavire, Christinah |
Author | Deol, Arminder |
Author | Scarponi, Danny |
Author | Mboera, Leonard E. G. |
Author | Seruyange, Eric |
Author | Poirier, Mathieu J. P. |
Author | Bosomprah, Samuel |
Author | Udeze, Augustine O. |
Author | Dellagi, Koussay |
Author | Hozé, Nathanael |
Author | Chilongola, Jaffu |
Author | Nasrallah, Gheyath K. |
Author | Cauchemez, Simon |
Author | Salje, Henrik |
Available date | 2025-09-29T10:40:17Z |
Publication Date | 2025 |
Publication Name | Nature Medicine |
Resource | Scopus |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41591-025-03703-w |
ISSN | 10788956 |
Abstract | The first vaccine against chikungunya virus (CHIKV) has now been licensed; however, due to a limited knowledge of the underlying global burden, its potential to reduce disease burden remains unknown. We used data from seroprevalence studies, observed cases and mosquito distributions to quantify the underlying CHIKV burden in 180 countries and territories, and we explored the potential impact of vaccination campaigns. We estimate that 104 countries have experienced CHIKV transmission, covering 2.8 billion people, and that, in epidemic settings, the mean duration between outbreaks is 6.2 years, with 8.4% of the susceptible population infected per outbreak. Globally, there are 35 million annual infections, mainly in Southeast Asia, Africa and the Americas. Assuming a vaccine efficacy against disease of 70% and a protection against infection of 40%, vaccinating 50% of individuals over 12 years of age in places and times where the virus circulates would avert 4,436 infections, 0.34 deaths and 17 disability-adjusted life years per 100,000 doses used. These findings highlight the global burden of chikungunya and the potential of CHIKV vaccination campaigns. |
Sponsor | We thank R. Collier for her contributions to the literature review and data collection processes. We also thank N. Salez (Aix Marseille Universit\u00E9, IRD, EHESP French School of Public Health, EPV UMR_D 190 \u2018Emergence des Pathologies Virales\u2019, Marseille, France) for the creation of the Comoros dataset that is shared and maintained by K.D. H.S. and G.R.d.S. acknowledge support from CEPI and the European Research Council. S.C. acknowledges support from the European Commission under the EU4Health programme 2021\u20132027, Grant Agreement - Project: 101102733 \u2014 DURABLE. |
Language | en |
Publisher | Nature Research |
Subject | Viral Vaccines Chikungunya Vaccine Virus Vaccine Aedes Aegypti Aedes Albopictus Article Autochthonous Transmission Brazil Cape Verde Chikungunya Chikungunya Virus Consensus Controlled Study Cote D'ivoire Death Disability-adjusted Life Year Entomology Epidemic Eritrea Eswatini Gambia Global Disease Burden Guinea-bissau Human India Kenya Mathematical Model Medical Literature Medline Mozambique Nonhuman People By Vaccination Status Public Health Campaign Rwanda Search Engine Sensitivity Analysis Serological Surveillance Seroprevalence South Sudan Southeast Asia Susceptible Population Tanzania Timor-leste Togo Vaccination Vaccination Coverage Virus Transmission Western Hemisphere World Health Organization Animal Child Epidemiology Global Health Immunology Pathogenicity Prevention And Control Seroepidemiology Virology Animals Chikungunya Fever Child Disease Outbreaks Global Health Humans Seroepidemiologic Studies Vaccination Viral Vaccines |
Type | Article |
Pagination | 2342-2349 |
Issue Number | 7 |
Volume Number | 31 |
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