Show simple item record

AuthorRibeiro dos Santos, Gabriel
AuthorJawed, Fariha
AuthorMukandavire, Christinah
AuthorDeol, Arminder
AuthorScarponi, Danny
AuthorMboera, Leonard E. G.
AuthorSeruyange, Eric
AuthorPoirier, Mathieu J. P.
AuthorBosomprah, Samuel
AuthorUdeze, Augustine O.
AuthorDellagi, Koussay
AuthorHozé, Nathanael
AuthorChilongola, Jaffu
AuthorNasrallah, Gheyath K.
AuthorCauchemez, Simon
AuthorSalje, Henrik
Available date2025-09-29T10:40:17Z
Publication Date2025
Publication NameNature Medicine
ResourceScopus
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41591-025-03703-w
ISSN10788956
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/67610
AbstractThe 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.
SponsorWe 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.
Languageen
PublisherNature Research
SubjectViral 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
TitleGlobal burden of chikungunya virus infections and the potential benefit of vaccination campaigns
TypeArticle
Pagination2342-2349
Issue Number7
Volume Number31
dc.accessType Open Access


Files in this item

Thumbnail

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record