Nature Communications (Jan 2024)

Incidence and transmission of respiratory syncytial virus in urban and rural South Africa, 2017-2018

  • Cheryl Cohen,
  • Jackie Kleynhans,
  • Jocelyn Moyes,
  • Meredith L. McMorrow,
  • Florette K. Treurnicht,
  • Orienka Hellferscee,
  • Nicole Wolter,
  • Neil A. Martinson,
  • Kathleen Kahn,
  • Limakatso Lebina,
  • Katlego Mothlaoleng,
  • Floidy Wafawanaka,
  • Francesc Xavier Gómez-Olivé,
  • Thulisa Mkhencele,
  • Azwifarwi Mathunjwa,
  • Maimuna Carrim,
  • Angela Mathee,
  • Stuart Piketh,
  • Brigitte Language,
  • Anne von Gottberg,
  • Stefano Tempia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-44275-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Data on respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) incidence and household transmission are limited. To describe RSV incidence and transmission, we conducted a prospective cohort study in rural and urban communities in South Africa over two seasons during 2017-2018. Nasopharyngeal swabs were collected twice-weekly for 10 months annually and tested for RSV using PCR. We tested 81,430 samples from 1,116 participants in 225 households (follow-up 90%). 32% (359/1116) of individuals had ≥1 RSV infection; 10% (37/359) had repeat infection during the same season, 33% (132/396) of infections were symptomatic, and 2% (9/396) sought medical care. Incidence was 47.2 infections/100 person-years and highest in children 10 days were more likely to transmit; household contacts aged 1-4 years vs. ≥65 years were more likely to acquire infection. Within two South African communities, RSV attack rate was high, and most infections asymptomatic. Young children were more likely to introduce RSV into the home, and to be infected. Future studies should examine whether vaccines targeting children aged <12 years could reduce community transmission.