Abstract

BackgroundDengue virus (DENV) is a frequent travel-related infection, but longitudinal data on its incidence is limited. We aimed to study temporal trends of travel-related DENV burden and its geographical sources. MethodsAll cases of laboratory-confirmed DENV infection diagnosed at the Central Virology Laboratory of the Israeli Ministry of Health during 2008–2019 were evaluated. Numbers of Israeli tourist-entries to DENV endemic countries were available from the UN World Tourist Organization (UNWTO) database. DENV attack rates were calculated as cases per 100,000 traveler-entries. In addition, for Thailand and India incidence rates were calculated, using the average duration of stay reported in diagnosed DENV cases. ResultsDuring 2008–2019, 425 Israeli travelers were diagnosed with DENV: 80.3%, 12.8% and 6.9% were acquired in Asia, America and Africa respectively. The average global DENV attack rate increased from 2.5 cases per 100,000 tourist-entries in 2008 to 10.7 cases per 100,000 tourist-entries in 2019. Region-specific DENV attack rates were 4.4, 3.2 and 2.1 cases per 100,000 tourist-entries to Asia, Africa, and America respectively.The highest number of DENV cases were reported from Thailand and India; DENV incidence rates increased from 94.5 to 142.2 cases per 100,000 travel-years, and from 49.3 to 90.4 cases per 100,000 travel-years for Thailand and India respectively. ConclusionAmong Israeli travelers, worldwide DENV attack-rates have quadrupled during 2008–2019, reflecting both a growing DENV burden in Asia, but also the emergence of Africa as an important source of DENV. The need to protect travelers through vaccination remains urgent.

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