Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (Aug 2024)

Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis to Prevent Hematophagous Bat-Mediated Rabies Outbreaks in Remote Amazon Communities: Lessons from a Pilot for Public Health Policy

  • Felipe Rocha,
  • Alexander Vargas,
  • Elke Maria Nogueira de Abreu,
  • Julio Cesar Augusto Pompei,
  • Marco Antonio Natal Vigilato,
  • Daniel Magalhães Lima,
  • Raphael Schneider Vianna,
  • Ottorino Cosivi,
  • Sergio E. Recuenco,
  • Wagner Augusto Costa,
  • Luciana Hardt,
  • Karin Correa Scheffer Ferreira,
  • Rene dos Santos Cunha Neto,
  • Luciana Botelho Chaves,
  • Andrea de Cassia Rodrigues da Silva,
  • Alberto Lopes Begot,
  • Jorge Alberto Azevedo Andrade,
  • Weber Marcos,
  • Silene Manrique Rocha,
  • Francisco Edilson Ferreira Lima Junior,
  • Marcelo Yoshito Wada

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed9080179
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 8
p. 179

Abstract

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In 2018, an outbreak of human rabies caused by the hematophagous bat Desmodus rotundus hit the Brazilian Amazon Basin community of Melgaço, Brazil, resulting in the death of 10 people, 9 of them children. The incidence of rabies has been on the rise among populations in conditions of vulnerability in this ecosystem due to human expansion into sylvatic environments and limited access to public health services. To address this issue, in September 2019, a collaborative effort from national, local, and international institutions promoted and executed a pilot for pre-exposure prophylaxis of a population in high-risk areas for hematophagous bat-mediated rabies. This measure is usually only implemented in response to outbreaks. The pilot was conducted in Portel, in a nearby location to the previous outbreak, with the use of fluvial transportation, and 2987 individuals in 411 dwellings were successfully vaccinated. It established a methodology for pre-exposure prophylaxis for populations in conditions of vulnerability, identifying logistics and costs, as well as characterizing the target riverine population regarding risk factors associated with bites by hematophagous bats. This approach offers a proactive measure to prevent future outbreaks and provides valuable insights into how to address the issue of rabies in remote and difficult-to-reach areas.

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