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Infection With Influenza A(H1n1)Pdm09 During The First Wave Of The 2009 Pandemic: Evidence From A Longitudinal Seroepidemiologic Study In Dhaka, Bangladesh

INFLUENZA AND OTHER RESPIRATORY VIRUSES(2017)

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Abstract
Background: We determined influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 antibody levels before and after the first wave of the pandemic in an urban community in Dhaka, Bangladesh.Methods: We identified a cohort of households by stratified random sampling. We collected baseline serum specimens during July-August 2009, just prior to the initial wave of the 2009 pandemic in this community and a second specimen during November 2009, after the pandemic peak. Paired sera were tested for antibodies against A(H1N1) pdm09 virus using microneutralization assay and hemagglutinin inhibition (HI) assay. A fourfold increase in antibody titer by either assay with a titer of >= 40 in the convalescent sera was considered a seroconversion. At baseline, an HI titer of >= 40 was considered seropositive. We collected information on clinical illness from weekly home visits.Results: We tested 779 paired sera from the participants. At baseline, before the pandemic wave, 1% overall and 3% of persons >60 years old were seropositive. After the first wave of the pandemic, 211 (27%) individuals seroconverted against A(H1N1) pdm09. Children aged 5-17 years had the highest proportion (37%) of seroconversion. Among 264 (34%) persons with information on clinical illness, 191 (72%) had illness >3 weeks prior to collection of the follow-up sera and 73 (38%) seroconverted. Sixteen (22%) of these 73 seroconverted participants reported no clinical illness.Conclusion: After the first pandemic wave in Dhaka, one in four persons were infected by A(H1N1) pdm09 virus and the highest burden of infection was among the school-aged children. Seroprevalence studies supplement traditional surveillance systems to estimate infection burden.
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Key words
Bangladesh, H1N1 subtype, influenza A virus, pandemic, seroconversion, seroepidemiologic studies
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