Abstract

BackgroundThe Zika virus disease (ZVD) has had a huge impact on public health in Colombia for the numbers of people affected and the presentation of Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS) and microcephaly cases associated to ZVD.MethodsA retrospective descriptive study was carried out, we analyze the epidemiological situation of ZVD and its association with microcephaly and GBS during a 21-month period, from October 2015 to June 2017. The variables studied were: (i) ZVD cases, (ii) ZVD cases in pregnant women, (iii) laboratory-confirmed ZVD in pregnant women, (iv) ZVD cases associated with microcephaly, (v) laboratory-confirmed ZVD associated with microcephaly, and (vi) ZVD associated to GBS cases. Average number of cases, attack rates (AR) and proportions were also calculated. The studied variables were plotted by epidemiological weeks and months. The distribution of ZVD cases in Colombia was mapped across the time using Kernel density estimator and QGIS software; we adopted Kernel Ridge Regression (KRR) and the Gaussian Kernel to estimate the number of Guillain Barre cases given the number of ZVD cases.ResultsOne hundred eight thousand eighty-seven ZVD cases had been reported in Colombia, including 19,963 (18.5%) in pregnant women, 710 (0.66%) associated with microcephaly (AR, 4.87 cases per 10,000 live births) and 453 (0.42%) ZVD associated to GBS cases (AR, 41.9 GBS cases per 10,000 ZVD cases). It appears the cases of GBS increased in parallel with the cases of ZVD, cases of microcephaly appeared 5 months after recognition of the outbreak. The kernel density map shows that throughout the study period, the states most affected by the Zika outbreak in Colombia were mainly San Andrés and Providencia islands, Casanare, Norte de Santander, Arauca and Huila. The KRR shows that there is no proportional relationship between the number of GBS and ZVD cases. During the cross validation, the RMSE achieved for the second order polynomial kernel, the linear kernel, the sigmoid kernel, and the Gaussian kernel are 9.15, 9.2, 10.7, and 7.2 respectively.ConclusionsThis study updates the epidemiological analysis of the ZVD situation in Colombia describes the geographical distribution of ZVD and shows the functional relationship between ZVD cases and GBS.

Highlights

  • The Zika virus disease (ZVD) has had a huge impact on public health in Colombia for the numbers of people affected and the presentation of Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS) and microcephaly cases associated to ZVD

  • The variables studied were: (i) ZVD cases, (ii) ZVD cases in pregnant women, (iii) laboratoryconfirmed ZVD in pregnant women, (iv) ZVD cases associated with microcephaly, (v) laboratory-confirmed ZVD associated with microcephaly, and (vi) ZVD associated to GBS cases

  • A ZVD associated to GBS cases, is a person with laboratoryconfirmed ZVD or with symptoms of ZVD, living in an endemic area of residence or travel within 15 days of symptom onset to an area with laboratory-confirmed Zika virus (ZIKV) circulation [7, 14, 15]

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Summary

Introduction

The Zika virus disease (ZVD) has had a huge impact on public health in Colombia for the numbers of people affected and the presentation of Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS) and microcephaly cases associated to ZVD. Colombia has been an exceptional witness to an avalanche of emerging arboviruses. Outbreaks of Dengue, Venezuelan equine encephalitis, Chikungunya virus -associated arthralgia- and most recently Zika virus disease (ZVD) have caused significant health burden in Colombia. Guillain-Barre Syndrome (GBS), microcephaly and encephalitis due to arboviruses are novel and emerging public health issues in Colombia [2]. In Latin America, the countries with higher ZVD cases rate (i.e., [autochthonous suspected + autochthonous confirmed]/ 100,000 pop) are Honduras (396), Belize (239.62), Colombia (221.29), Venezuela (197.72), El Salvador (187.44) and Brazil (168.09) [3, 4]. In Colombia and Latin American, during the last months, the infection with ZVD has had a huge impact on public health and its effects continue to be felt [2]

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