Emerging Infectious Diseases (Dec 2019)

Seroprevalence and Risk Factors Possibly Associated with Emerging Zoonotic Vaccinia Virus in a Farming Community, Colombia

  • Ashley Styczynski,
  • Jillybeth Burgado,
  • Diana Walteros,
  • José Usme-Ciro,
  • Katherine Laiton,
  • Alejandra Pinilla Farias,
  • Yoshinori Nakazawa,
  • Christina Chapman,
  • Whitni Davidson,
  • Matthew Mauldin,
  • Clint Morgan,
  • Juan Martínez-Cerón,
  • Edilson Patiña,
  • Leidy Laura López Sepúlveda,
  • Claudia Patricia Torres,
  • Anyely Eliana Cruz Suarez,
  • Gina Paez Olaya,
  • Carlos Elkin Riveros,
  • Diana Yaneth Cepeda,
  • Leydi Acosta Lopez,
  • Daniela Gomez Espinosa,
  • Faiber Antonio Gutierrez Lozada,
  • Yu Li,
  • P.S. Satheshkumar,
  • Mary Reynolds,
  • Martha Gracia-Romero,
  • Brett Petersen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2512.181114
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 12
pp. 2169 – 2176

Abstract

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In 2014, vaccinia virus (VACV) infections were identified among farmworkers in Caquetá Department, Colombia; additional cases were identified in Cundinamarca Department in 2015. VACV, an orthopoxvirus (OPXV) used in the smallpox vaccine, has caused sporadic bovine and human outbreaks in countries such as Brazil and India. In response to the emergence of this disease in Colombia, we surveyed and collected blood from 134 farmworkers and household members from 56 farms in Cundinamarca Department. We tested serum samples for OPXV antibodies and correlated risk factors with seropositivity by using multivariate analyses. Fifty-two percent of farmworkers had OPXV antibodies; this percentage decreased to 31% when we excluded persons who would have been eligible for smallpox vaccination. The major risk factors for seropositivity were municipality, age, smallpox vaccination scar, duration of time working on a farm, and animals having vaccinia-like lesions. This investigation provides evidence for possible emergence of VACV as a zoonosis in South America.

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