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Seroprevalence of typhus group and spotted fever group Rickettsia exposures on Reunion island.

Patrick GerardinNaël ZemaliMarie BactoraGuillaume CamusetElsa BalleydierHervé PascalisVanina GuernierCorinne MussardAntoine BertolottiYatrika KoumarFlorence NazeSandrine PicotLaurent FilleulFrédéric PagesPablo TortosaJulien Jaubert
Published in: BMC research notes (2019)
The weighted seroprevalences of typhus group rickettsioses and spotted fever group rickettsioses were of 12.71% (95% CI 8.84-16.58%) and 17.68% (95% CI 13.25-22.11%), respectively. Pooled together, data suggested that a fifth of the population had been exposed at least to one Rickettsia group. Youths (< 20 years) were less likely seropositive than adults (adjusted PPR 0.13, 95% CI 0.01-0.91). People living in the western dryer part of the island were more exposed (adjusted PPR 2.53, 95% CI 1.07-5.97). Rickettsioses are endemic on Reunion island and circulated before their first identification as murine typhus in year 2011. Surprisingly, since isolation of Rickettsia africae from Amblyomma variegatum in year 2004 or isolation of Rickettsia felis from Amblyomma loculosum, no autochthonous cases of African tick-bite fever or flea-borne spotted fever has yet been diagnosed.
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