Japanese Journal of Infectious Diseases
Online ISSN : 1884-2836
Print ISSN : 1344-6304
ISSN-L : 1344-6304
Short Communications
Dengue Virus in Traveler Returning to Japan from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, 2015
Seiji P. YamamotoYu KasamatsuDaiki KanbayashiAtsushi KaidaMichinori ShiranoHideyuki KuboTetsushi GotoNobuhiro Iritani
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2019 Volume 72 Issue 6 Pages 426-428

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Abstract

Dengue fever (DF) is a mosquito-borne disease and a significant global public health problem. Although a few serological surveys in the literature suggest endemic DF in many parts of Africa, DF cases in these countries are generally underreported because of the lack of diagnostic testing and systematic surveillance; thus, little is known about the phylogenetic profile of circulating strains. In April 2015, DF was diagnosed in a Japanese national returning from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). Dengue virus 1 (DENV-1) RNA was detected in the patient’s serum sample using real-time reverse transcription PCR. Phylogenetic analysis of the E gene revealed that the detected DENV-1 strain was classified as genotype V and was closely related, with 100% nucleotide identity, to the strain causing the 2013 DF epidemic in Angola, which is located directly south of the DRC. This is the first report to characterize the circulating DENV strain in the DRC, and the findings indicate that the DENV-1 strain causing the 2013 DF epidemic in Angola was also circulating in the DRC in 2015.

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