As has been previously described [1], chikungunya virus disease (CHIK) has emerged in Latin America as a significant acute infectious disease condition, but also with multiple implications during its chronic phase, including the postchikungunya chronic inflammatory rheumatism (pCHIK-CIR). Until today, no observational studies in the region have described its prevalence, but recent estimations indicated that probably about 48 % of infected people in Latin America in a median of 20 months would develop it [2]. In this scenario, where over one million cases of CHIK were reported in the Americas during 2014, observational studies describing this rheumatologic consequence are urgently needed. Then, here, we detailed the prevalence of pCHIK chronic polyarthralgia (pCHIK-CPA) in patients that suffered from confirmed CHIK at least 6 weeks before current assessment with a maximum follow-up of 65 weeks (15 months) (median time of 35 weeks).From 39 patients that suffered CHIK (diagnosed by PCR during acute phase) between April 2014 and May 2015 who attended in Since, Sucre (one of the newly endemic departments), Colombia, 30 (76.9 %) corresponded to female patients, with a median age of 61 years old (range 17-88). Of them, 89.7 % developed persistent polyarthralgia (pCHIK-CPA) that met the American College of Rheumatology/ European League Against Rheumatism 2010 criteria for (seronegative) RA-presented persistent polyarthralgia [3], during the last week when all of them were reassessed after CHIK infection (June 2015), 92.3 % during the last month. A cumulated prevalence of pCHIK-CPA curve was drawn using the Kaplan-Meier method to describe the pCHIK-CPA persistence time (Fig. 1). After the follow-up, only 10.3 % patients remain free of polyarthralgia. The median time for pCHIK-CPA in this cohort was 37 weeks (95 %CI 31.4-42.6).Among the studies assessing pCHIK-CIR, its relative frequency is highly variable, ranging from 14.4 to 87.2 % (including variable number of patients and follow-up times) [2,4,5]. Unfortunately, only studies assessing acute polyarthralgia (96 %) and arthritis (47 %) have been published in Latin America during the current CHIK epidemics [6], even without laboratory serological or molecular confirmation, which is highly relevant [7]. The current cohort, the first in Latin America of pCHIK chronic polyarthralgia, shows a higher prevalence. These findings will require more detailed prospective studies, but despite its limitations, it