Emerging Infectious Diseases (Nov 2012)

Community Outbreak of Adenovirus, Taiwan, 2011

  • Tsung-Pei Tsou,
  • Boon-Fatt Tan,
  • Hsin-Yu Chang,
  • Wan-Chin Chen,
  • Yuan-Pin Huang,
  • Chen-Yin Lai,
  • Yen-Nan Chao,
  • Sung-Hsi Wei,
  • Min-Nan Hung,
  • Li-Ching Hsu,
  • Chun-Yi Lu,
  • Pei-Lan Shao,
  • Jung-Jung Mu,
  • Luan-Yin Chang,
  • Ming-Tsan Liu,
  • Li-Min Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1811.120629
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 11
pp. 1825 – 1832

Abstract

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In 2011, a large community outbreak of human adenovirus (HAdV) in Taiwan was detected by a nationwide surveillance system. The epidemic lasted from week 11 through week 41 of 2011 (March 14–October 16, 2011). Although HAdV-3 was the predominant strain detected (74%), an abrupt increase in the percentage of infections caused by HAdV-7 occurred, from 0.3% in 2008–2010 to 10% in 2011. Clinical information was collected for 202 inpatients infected with HAdV; 31 (15.2%) had severe infection that required intensive care, and 7 of those patients died. HAdV-7 accounted for 10%, 12%, and 41% of infections among outpatients, inpatients with nonsevere infection, and inpatients with severe infection, respectively (p<0.01). The HAdV-7 strain detected in this outbreak is identical to a strain recently reported in the People’s Republic of China (HAdV7-HZ/SHX/CHN/2009). Absence of circulating HAdV-7 in previous years and introduction of an emerging strain are 2 factors that caused this outbreak.

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