Abstract

BackgroundCholera outbreaks in western Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) are thought to be primarily the result of westward spread of cases from the Great Lakes Region. However, other patterns of spatial spread in this part of the country should not be excluded. The aim of this study was to explore alternative routes of spatial spread in western DRC.MethodsA literature review was conducted to reconstruct major outbreak expansions of cholera in western DRC since its introduction in 1973. We also collected data on cholera cases reported at the health zone (HZ) scale by the national surveillance system during 2000–2018. Based on data from routine disease surveillance, we identified two subperiods (week 45, 2012–week 42, 2013 and week 40, 2017–week 52, 2018) for which the retrospective space–time permutation scan statistic was implemented to detect spatiotemporal clusters of cholera cases and then to infer the spread patterns in western DRC other than that described in the literature.ResultsBeyond westward and cross-border spread in the West Congo Basin from the Great Lakes Region, other dynamics of cholera epidemic propagation were observed from neighboring countries, such as Angola, to non-endemic provinces of southwestern DRC. Space–time clustering analyses sequentially detected clusters of cholera cases from southwestern DRC to the northern provinces, demonstrating a downstream-to-upstream spread along the Congo River.ConclusionsThe spread of cholera in western DRC is not one-sided. There are other patterns of spatial spread, including a propagation from downstream to upstream areas along the Congo River, to be considered as preferential trajectories of cholera in western DRC.

Highlights

  • Cholera outbreaks in western Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) are thought to be primarily the result of westward spread of cases from the Great Lakes Region

  • Based on recent cholera outbreaks that occurred in western DRC, we identified the subperiods to explore other spatial spread patterns than those described in the literature [17, 19]

  • We identified a list of 1751 records using the search terms. 208 records were deleted due to duplication and 1523 were excluded according to titles and abstracts or full texts that did not address the dynamics of the spread of cholera in western DRC and neighboring countries in the West Congo Basin

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Summary

Introduction

Cholera outbreaks in western Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) are thought to be primarily the result of westward spread of cases from the Great Lakes Region. It was determined that cholera has been introduced several times into sub-Saharan Africa, causing large. Outbreaks are reported irregularly in most countries, while the disease occurs endemically with a strong annual seasonality in a handful of countries, including the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) [2]. The latter is one of the world’s major areas of emergence and re-emergence of infectious diseases. Several important outbreaks were reported across the country, including Ebola Virus Disease [3], measles [4, 5], yellow fever [6], and Human African trypanosomiasis [7, 8]

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