Abstract

BackgroundA hepatitis A epidemic occurred among men who have sex with men (MSM) in Japan in 2017–2018. In this study, we employ a parsimonious mathematical model to epidemiologically investigate the dynamics of infection, aiming to evaluate the effectiveness of campaign-based interventions among MSM to raise awareness of the situation.MethodsA mathematical model describing a mixture of human-to-human transmission and environmental transmission was fitted to surveillance data. Taking seasonally varying environmental transmission into account, we estimated the reproduction number of hepatitis A virus during the course of epidemic, and, especially, the abrupt decline in this reproduction number following campaign-based interventions.ResultsThe reproduction number prior to the countermeasures ranged from 2.6 to 3.1 and then began to decrease following campaign-based interventions. After the first countermeasure, the reproduction number decreased, but the epidemic remained supercritical (i.e., Rt > 1). The value of Rt dropped well below one following the second countermeasure, which used web articles to widely disseminate information about the epidemic risk.ConclusionsAlthough the effective reproduction number, Rt, changes because of both intrinsic and extrinsic factors, the timing of the examined countermeasures against hepatitis A in the MSM population was consistent with the abrupt declines observed in Rt. Even without vaccination, the epidemic was brought under control, and risky behaviors may have been changed by the increase in situation awareness reached through web articles.

Highlights

  • A hepatitis A epidemic occurred among men who have sex with men (MSM) in Japan in 2017–2018

  • Quantifying the transmission dynamics, we observed that the human-to-human transmission peaked around the time when the second countermeasure was implemented (Fig. 3B)

  • The effective reproduction number, Rt, changes because of both intrinsic and extrinsic factors, the present study suggests that the interventions that were implemented to raise situation awareness regarding the epidemic among the MSM population were influential

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Summary

Introduction

A hepatitis A epidemic occurred among men who have sex with men (MSM) in Japan in 2017–2018. We employ a parsimonious mathematical model to epidemiologically investigate the dynamics of infection, aiming to evaluate the effectiveness of campaign-based interventions among MSM to raise awareness of the situation. Hepatitis A, an acute viral infectious disease, is a type of hepatitis that frequently involves long-lasting fever, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, and strong fatigue, with or without jaundice [1], the infection is sometimes asymptomatic. In Asia, a large outbreak of HAV occurred in Shanghai in 1988, involving 300,000 infections [7]. People who recover from natural infection with HAV develop life-long immunity [8], and a safe and effective (inactivated or live-attenuated) vaccine is available [9]. There is no specific treatment for hepatitis A, and only supportive care is routinely offered [2, 4]

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