Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Alternating patterns of seasonal influenza activity in the WHO European Region following the 2009 pandemic, 2010-2018

Piers Mook,Tamara Meerhoff,Sonja J. Olsen,Rene Snacken,Cornelia Adlhoch,Dmitriy Pereyaslov,Eeva K. Broberg,Angeliki Melidou,Caroline Brown,Pasi Penttinen,Artan Simaku, Iris Hasibra, Liana Torosyan, Shushan Sargsyan,Monika Redlberger-Fritz, Judith H. Aberle, Oleg Salimov, Nazakat Abdullayeva, Veronika Shimanovich, Natalia Gribkova,Nathalie Bossuyt, Isabelle Thomas, Anna Kurchatova,Neli Korsun,Goranka Petrovic, Vladimir Drazenovic, Maria Koliou, Despo Pieridou,Martina Havlickova, Jan Kyncl, Tyra Grove Krause,Ramona Trebbien, Olga Sadikova, Natalja Kuznetsova, Vincent Enouf,Sibylle Bernard-Stoecklin,Niina Ikonen, Outi Lyytikainen,Ann Machablishvili,Khatuna Zakhashvili, Silke Buda,Ralf Durrwald, Ourania Kalkouni,Georgia Gioula, Zsuzsanna Molnar, Monika Rozsa, Linda Dunford,Joan O. Donnell, Gudrun Sigmundsdottir, Gudrun Erna Baldvinsdottir,Zalman Kaufman, Michal Mandelboim, Caterina Rizzo,Maria Rita Castrucci, Sultanova Meirim, Altynay Sagimbay,Otorbaeva Dinagul, Bodoshev Azat, Raina Nikiforova, Natalija Zamjatina, Asta Skrickiene, Algirdas Griskevicius, Guillaume Fournier, Joel Mossong,Jackie M. Melillo, Graziella Zahra,Bozidarka Rakocevic, Zoran Vratnica, Ge Donker, Adam Meijer, Golubinka Bosevska, Vladimir Mikikj, Trine Hessevik Paulsen, Olav Hunges, Lidia B. Brydak,Katarzyna Luniewska, Raquel Guiomar, Ana Paula Rodrigues, Stefan Gheorghita, Constantin Spinu,Rodica Popescu, Alina Ivanciuc, Anna A. Sominina,Elena Burtseva, Dragana Dimitrijevic, Svetlana Filipovic-Vignjevic, Arijana Kalaveshi,Maja Socan,Katarina Prosenc, Ivan Bakoss,Edita Staronova, Amparo Larrauri, Francisco Pozo,AnnaSara Carnahan,Mia Brytting,Damir Perisa, Ana Rita Goncalves, Tamanno Safarova, Niginamo Zakirova, Emine Avci,Ayse Basak Altas, Oksana Artemchuk, Iryna Demchishyna, Richard Pebody, Joanna Ellis, Conall McCaughey,Mark O'Doherty, Jim Mcmenamin,Arlene Reynolds, Simon Cottrell, Catherine Moore, Sultana Djemileva, Ravshan Rakhimov, John McCauley, Rod Daniels

INFLUENZA AND OTHER RESPIRATORY VIRUSES(2020)

Cited 11|Views11
No score
Abstract
Background Influenza virus infections are common and lead to substantial morbidity and mortality worldwide. We characterized the first eight influenza epidemics since the 2009 influenza pandemic by describing the distribution of viruses and epidemics temporally and geographically across the WHO European Region. Methods We retrospectively analyzed laboratory-confirmed influenza detections in ambulatory patients from sentinel sites. Data were aggregated by reporting entity and season (weeks 40-20) for 2010-2011 to 2017-2018. We explored geographical spread using correlation coefficients. Results There was variation in the regional influenza epidemics during the study period. Influenza A virus subtypes alternated in dominance, except for 2013-2014 during which both cocirculated, and only one season (2017-2018) was B virus dominant. The median start week for epidemics in the Region was week 50, the time to the peak ranged between four and 13 weeks, and the duration of the epidemic ranged between 19 and 25 weeks. There was evidence of a west-to-east spread across the Region during epidemics in 2010-2011 (r = .365; P = .019), 2012-2013 (r = .484; P = .001), 2014-2015 (r = .423; P = .006), and 2017-2018 (r = .566; P < .001) seasons. Variation in virus distribution and timing existed within reporting entities across seasons and across reporting entities for a given season. Conclusions Aggregated influenza detection data from sentinel surveillance sites by season between 2010 and 2018 have been presented for the European Region for the first time. Substantial diversity exists between influenza epidemics. These data can inform prevention and control efforts at national, sub-national, and international levels. Aggregated, regional surveillance data from early affected reporting entities may provide an early warning function and be helpful for early season forecasting efforts.
More
Translated text
Key words
Central Asia,Europe,influenza,surveillance
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined