PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Mar 2019)

Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome can masquerade as hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome.

  • Rui Qi,
  • Xiang-Rong Qin,
  • Ling Wang,
  • Hui-Ju Han,
  • Feng Cui,
  • Hao Yu,
  • Jian-Wei Liu,
  • Xue-Jie Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007308
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
p. e0007308

Abstract

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BACKGROUND:Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is an emerging viral hemorrhagic fever with a high fatality rate and high frequency of person-to-person transmission and is caused by SFTSV, a tick-borne Phlebovirus. Because SFTS has similar clinical manifestations and epidemic characters (such as spatial and temporal distributions) with hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) in China, we reason that SFTS patients might be misdiagnosed as HFRS. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:Acute-phase sera of 128 clinically diagnosed HFRS patients were retrospectively analyzed for Hantavirus IgM antibodies with ELISA. Hantavirus-negative patients' sera were further analyzed for SFTSV IgM antibodies with ELISA. ELISA showed that 73 of 128 (57.0%) of clinically diagnosed HFRS patients were IgM antibody positive to Hantaviruses. Among the 55 Hantavirus-IgM negative patients, four (7.3%) were IgM antibody positive to SFTSV. The results indicated that the four SFTS patients were misdiagnosed as HFRS. The misdiagnosed SFTS patients had clinical manifestations common to HFRS and were unable to be differentiated from HFRS clinically. CONCLUSIONS:Our study showed that SFTS patients could be clinically misdiagnosed as HFRS. The misdiagnosis of SFTS as HFRS causes particular concern because it may increase the risk of death of SFTS patients and person-to-person transmission of SFTSV without proper care for and isolation of SFTS patients.