BackgroundLeptospirosis is a bacterial zoonosis caused by pathogenic Leptospira for which rats are considered as the main reservoir. Disease incidence is higher in tropical countries, especially in insular ecosystems. Our objectives were to determine the current burden of leptospirosis in Seychelles, a country ranking first worldwide according to historical data, to establish epidemiological links between animal reservoirs and human disease, and to identify drivers of transmission.MethodsA total of 223 patients with acute febrile symptoms of unknown origin were enrolled in a 12-months prospective study and tested for leptospirosis through real-time PCR, IgM ELISA and MAT. In addition, 739 rats trapped throughout the main island were investigated for Leptospira renal carriage. All molecularly confirmed positive samples were further genotyped.ResultsA total of 51 patients fulfilled the biological criteria of acute leptospirosis, corresponding to an annual incidence of 54.6 (95% CI 40.7–71.8) per 100,000 inhabitants. Leptospira carriage in Rattus spp. was overall low (7.7%) but dramatically higher in Rattus norvegicus (52.9%) than in Rattus rattus (4.4%). Leptospira interrogans was the only detected species in both humans and rats, and was represented by three distinct Sequence Types (STs). Two were novel STs identified in two thirds of acute human cases while noteworthily absent from rats.ConclusionsThis study shows that human leptospirosis still represents a heavy disease burden in Seychelles. Genotype data suggests that rats are actually not the main reservoir for human disease. We highlight a rather limited efficacy of preventive measures so far implemented in Seychelles. This could result from ineffective control measures of excreting animal populations, possibly due to a misidentification of the main contaminating reservoir(s). Altogether, presented data stimulate the exploration of alternative reservoir animal hosts.
The incidence of iGBS disease found in Réunion island is twofold that usually reported. This burden is linked to overweight in aboriginal people from the Indian Ocean.
Prolonged fatigue is increasingly reported among chikungunya virus (CHIKV)-infected
populations. We investigated the relationships between CHIKV exposure, long-lasting
rheumatic musculoskeletal pain (LRMSP) and chronic fatigue. 1094 participants (512 CHIKV
seropositive and 582 seronegative) of the TELECHIK population-based cohort were analysed
considering the duration of the manifestations throughout an average 2-year follow-up.
Weighted prevalence rates and prevalence ratios for LRMSP, idiopathic chronic fatigue
(ICF), and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS)-like illness, both latter syndromes adapted from
Centers for Disease Control (CDC)-1994/Fukuda criteria, were compared. Population
attributable fractions (PAF) were estimated to assess the contribution of CHIKV infection
to each of the three phenotypes. Among 362 adult subjects who had reported either
rheumatic pain or fatigue at the onset of the infection, weighted prevalence rates of
LRMSP, ICF and CFS-like illness were respectively of 32.9%, 38.7% and 23.9%, and of 8.7%,
8.5% and 7.4% among initially asymptomatic peers (P < 0.01,
respectively). Each of the three outcomes was highly attributable to chikungunya (PAF of
43.2%, 36.2% and 41.0%, respectively). In the sub-cohort of CHIKV-infected subjects,
LRMSP, ICF and CFS-like illness, which overlapped in 70%, accounted for 53% of the chronic
manifestations. In addition to rheumatic disease, chronic fatigue could be considered in
caring for patients with chronic chikungunya disease.
In South Western Indian ocean (IO), Extended-Spectrum β-Lactamase producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-E) are a main public health issue. In livestock, ESBL-E burden was unknown. The aim of this study was estimating the prevalence of ESBL-E on commercial farms in Reunion, Mayotte and Madagascar and genes involved. Secondly, risk factors of ESBL-E occurrence in broiler, beef cattle and pig farms were explored. In 2016–2017, commercial farms were sampled using boot swabs and samples stored at 4 °C before microbiological analysis for phenotypical ESBL-E and gene characterization. A dichotomous questionnaire was performed. Prevalences observed in all production types and territories were high, except for beef cattle in Reunion, which differed significantly. The most common ESBL gene was blaCTX-M-1. Generalized linear models explaining ESBL-E occurrence varied between livestock production sectors and allowed identifying main protective (e.g., water quality control and detergent use for cleaning) and risk factors (e.g., recent antibiotic use, other farmers visiting the exploitation, pet presence). This study is the first to explore tools for antibiotic resistance management in IO farms. It provides interesting hypothesis to explore about antibiotic use in IO territories and ESBL-E transmission between pig, beef cattle and humans in Madagascar.
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