Abstract

Across the Pacific, and including in the Solomon Islands, outbreaks of arboviruses such as dengue, chikungunya, and Zika are increasing in frequency, scale and impact. Outbreaks of mosquito-borne disease have the potential to overwhelm the health systems of small island nations. This study mapped the seroprevalence of dengue, Zika, chikungunya and Ross River viruses in 5 study sites in the Solomon Islands. Serum samples from 1,021 participants were analysed by ELISA. Overall, 56% of participants were flavivirus-seropositive for dengue (28%), Zika (1%) or both flaviviruses (27%); and 53% of participants were alphavirus-seropositive for chikungunya (3%), Ross River virus (31%) or both alphaviruses (18%). Seroprevalence for both flaviviruses and alphaviruses varied by village and age of the participant. The most prevalent arboviruses in the Solomon Islands were dengue and Ross River virus. The high seroprevalence of dengue suggests that herd immunity may be a driver of dengue outbreak dynamics in the Solomon Islands. Despite being undetected prior to this survey, serology results suggest that Ross River virus transmission is endemic. There is a real need to increase the diagnostic capacities for each of the arboviruses to support effective case management and to provide timely information to inform vector control efforts and other outbreak mitigation interventions.

Highlights

  • Mosquito-borne diseases are increasing in geographic distribution and incidence [1]

  • Cross-reactivity of IgG antibodies amongst flaviviruses and alphaviruses is well documented and is a confounding factor for serological studies investigating the seroprevalence of arboviruses

  • All samples that were positive for both DENV/ ZIKV or CHIKV/Ross River (RRV) were recorded as flavivirus or alphavirus positive, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Mosquito-borne diseases are increasing in geographic distribution and incidence [1]. Dengue incidence increased 30-fold globally over the past 50 years, with transmission spreading into many new countries [2,3]. The threat of increasing mosquito borne diseases is of high concern to the small Pacific island countries’ fragile health systems where outbreaks of arboviruses, including dengue (DENV), Zika (ZIKV), chikungunya (CHIKV) and Ross River (RRV) viruses, are increasing in frequency, scale and impact [6]. Patients infected with these arboviruses present with overlapping symptoms, making symptomatic diagnosis unreliable. Initial symptoms include fever, headache, myalgia, arthralgia, maculopapular rash and lymphadenopathies [7,8]

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