Title: Japanese Encephalitis: Epidemiology, Prevention and Control
1Japanese EncephalitisEpidemiology, Prevention
and Control
2JE Global Burden
- A disease of public health importance
- - Epidemic potential
- - High case fatality
- - Complications leading to life long
sequelae - Previously disease of East Asia - Japan, Korea
and China - Recent years spread to SEA - Thailand, Indonesia,
India, Vietnam, Myanmar and Sri Lanka. - Estimated 43,000 cases with 11,000 deaths and
9,000 disabilities occur / year globally
3JE in India Historical Background
1952 - First evidence of JE viral activity by
VRC (NIV) 1955 - First human case of JE
1956 - First viral isolation from mosquitoes
1958 - First viral isolation from JE case 1973
- First outbreak in Bankura Burdwan in West
Bengal 1976 - Repeat outbreak in Burdwan
1978 - Several states reported outbreaks of JE
2003 - JE prevention and control under integrated
NVBDCP
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5JE endemic areas in India
- Uttar Pradesh
- Andhra Pradesh
- Assam
- Bihar
- Goa
- Karnataka
- Maharashtra
- Tamilnadu
- West Bengal
- Kerala
- Jharkhand
- Orissa
- Manipur
- Punjab
- Haryana
6Agent-Host-Vector-Environment
- Agent
- JE is a viral disease - an Arbovirus (Flavivirus)
- Closely linked antigenically to other
flaviviruses - Single serotype, but geographic strains differ by
RNA sequencing - Neurotorpic and primarily affects central nervous
system - Host
- JE virus is primarily zoonotic in its natural
cycle. - Natural hosts Animals and Birds
- - Pigs amplifier host - allow manifold virus
multiplication without suffering from disease
maintain prolonged viraemia. - - Cattle and buffaloes mosquito attractants
- Man is an accidental dead-end host.
- -usual age group below 15 years with no sex
predilection
7- Vectors
- Culex tritaeniorhynchus, C. vishnui and C.
pseudovishnui. - Breeding habit Irrigated rice fields, shallow
ditches and pools etc. - Resting habit Exophilic but may rest indoor in
extreme summer - Feeding habit Zoophilic and outdoor as well as
indoor feeders - The average life span of mosquito is about 21
days - Flight Range long distance (1 - 3 kms or even
more) -
- Environment
- Mainly prevalent in rural areas
- Outbreak is a seasonal phenomenon
- Mosquito vector prefers large and clean water
collections for breeding - paddy cultivation
areas offer typical favourable situation - Rural setting offers the amplifier hosts in
abundance - Occurrence in monsoon and post-monsoon season in
north India from May-October, in southern part
from August to November
8How Japanese Encephalitis is transmitted?
- Transmission Cycle
- Pig Mosquito Pig
- Bird Mosquito Bird
- Due to prolonged viraemia, mosquitoes get
opportunity to pick up infection from pigs
easily. - After an extrinsic incubation period of 9 12
days Infected female mosquito transmits the virus
to other hosts - Man is a dead end in transmission cycle due to
low and short-lived viraemia. Mosquitoes do not
get infection from JE patient.
9Clinical Manifestations
- High ratio of symptomatic to asymptomatic
infections - (1250 to 11000)
- Incubation period 6-16 days
- Course of the disease can be divided into three
stages - Prodromal stage
- - Acute onset - fever, chills, headache and
malaise - Acute encephalitic stage
- - High fever (38 to 40.7o C), neck rigidity,
photophobia, nausea, vomiting, seizures and
altered sensorium. - - Variable neurological signs appear
(cranial nerve palsies, tremors, ataxia, abnormal
reflexes, paralysis, delirium and ultimately
coma) - Late stage and sequelae
- - Active inflammation subsides, neurological
signs stable - - Sequelae Parkinsonism, paralysis and
mental retardation - Case Fatality Rate Exceeds 25
10Case Definitions for JE Diagnosis and Reporting
- Suspect case Acute Encephalitis Syndrome
- Febrile illness of variable severity
associated with neurological symptoms ranging
from headache to meningitis or encephalitis. - Symptoms can include headache, fever,
meningeal signs, stupor, disorientation, coma,
tremors, paralysis (generalized), hypertonia ,
loss of coordination. - - (Patient with fever, altered sensorium
lasting more than 6 hours, no skin rash and other
known causes of encephalitis excluded)
11- Probable Case
- A suspected case with presumptive
laboratory results - Detection of an acute phase anti-viral
antibody response through one of the following - - - Elevated and stable JE antibody titres in
serum through ELISA or HI or virus
neutralization assays OR - - IgM antibody to the virus in serum
-
- Confirmed Case
- A suspect case with confirmed laboratory
result - - Detection of JE virus, antigen or genome in
tissue, blood or other body fluid by
immuno-chemistry, immuno-fluorescence or PCR, or - - JE virus specific IgM in CSF or
- - Four fold or greater rise in paired sera
(acute convalescent phases) through IgM/IgG
ELISA, HI or virus neutralization test
12Disease Burden
- Leading cause of viral encephalitis in Asia
- 35,000-50,000 cases annually
- (SourceCDC,2004)
13Death and disability from JE
- Up to 30 of all patients with JE die.
- For those that survive the illness, more than 30
cases are left with disability. - Disability is both physical and cognitive.
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15Management
- Mainly symptomatic supportive
- Therapeutic norms for the supportive therapy
are not established - Fluid and electrolyte balance
- Reduction of intra-cranial pressure
- Control of convulsions, if present
- Maintenance of airway is crucial
16Preventive strategies
- Surveillance for cases of encephalitis
- Vector control
- vaccination
17Prevention and Control of JE
- Early diagnosis and proper management of JE cases
- Strengthening of referral mechanism
- Integrated Vector Management
- - Insecticide residual spray not recommended
- - Reduction of breeding sources Water
management system with intermittent irrigation
system incorporation of neem products in rice
fields - - Anti-larval operations wherever feasible
larvivorous fish, biolarvicides - - Fogging with Malathion for immediate killing
of mosquitoes during outbreak - - Reduction in man-vector contact personal
protection with ITNs, repellents, clothing etc.
and exploring possibility of segregation of pigs,
mosquito proofing of piggeries.
18Vaccination
- Not an outbreak response vaccine
- Universal vaccine for JE endemic areas
- All children from 1 15 years should be
vaccinated - Phillipines study shows acceptable efficacy when
coadministered with measles vaccine at 9 months. - Travellers vaccine in JE endemic areas when
expected to stay for 4 weeks and should complete
the doses prior to 1 week before travel.
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20Vacine Type Strain substrate Producer Remarks on licensure marketing
Inactivated, Purified Nakayama Strain Mouse brain Biken - Japan International
Inactivated, Purified Nakayama Strain Mouse brain Green Cross - Korea Local Regional
Inactivated, Purified Nakayama Strain Mouse brain Vabiotech - Vietnam Local
Inactivated, Purified Nakayama Strain Mouse brain GPO - Thailand Local Regional
Inactivated, Purified Beijing 1 strain Mouse-brain Kaketsuken, Biken Kitasota - Japan Production stopped, bulk storage.
Inactivated, Purified P3 strain PHK or Vero cells Several - China Domestic only.
Live, attenuated SA 14-14-2 strain on PHK Chengdu - China Marketed for both domestic use and for use in Nepal, S. Korea, Sri Lanka and India. Prequalification status Product Summary File under preparation.
SA 14-14-2 strain on PHK Wuhan, Lanzhou - China Marketed for domentic use in China only.
Under development SA 14-14-2 strain Verocells Intercell, Biological Evans - India Under various stages of development and licensing
Beijing 1 strain Vero cells Biken - Japan Kaketsuken - Japan Submitted for licensing for paediatric use locally in Japan. International marketing plans not known.
SA 14-14 - 2 pr M E in 17D YF backbone Sanofi Pasteur, Bharat Biotech, Panecea - India Under various stages of development and licensing
21- JE VACCINE
- INACTIVATED MOUSE BRAIN VACCINE
- It is expensive vaccine, complicated dosing
schedule, side effect of this vaccine. - Inactivated Mouse brain vaccine
- 3-5 US dollars/dose
- 9 15 US dollars/per child
- The mouse brain vaccine manufactured by killing
populations of mice was being manufactured by
Central Research Institute, Kasauli. - LIVE ATTENUATED VACCINE
- SA 14 - 14-2 (Chinese live attenuated vaccine at
affordable cost, safe, effective). - This vaccine was developed in China and has been
used there since 1988. - it has been licensed and used in South Korea and
Nepal and licensed in Sri Lanka. - It also appears feasible that a single dose of
vaccine will provide life-long protection.
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23Prevention and Control of JE
- Behaviour Change Communication for community
participation and inter-sectoral convergence - Capacity building through training on case
management and control of JE - Vaccination of children in JE endemic areas
- (1 and 15 years)
- Operational research
- Monitoring and Evaluation
24Gaps and Challenges of the Prevention and Control
of JE
- Outdoor habit of the vector variation in vector
bionomics - Scattered distribution of cases spread over
relatively large areas - Role of different reservoir hosts
- Specific vectors for different geographical and
ecological areas - Immune status of various population groups is not
known making it difficult to delineate vulnerable
population groups.
25Gaps and Challenges of the Prevention and Control
of JE
- Difficulties in segregation of pigs
- Inadequate surveillance
- Efficient rapid diagnostics for field use not
available - Inadequate epidemic forecasting preparedness
- Lack of supervision monitoring.
- Limited inter-sectoral convergence and community
participation - JE immunization programme-supply of vaccines and
cold chain arrangements, cost factor, coverage.
26National Vector Borne Disease Control Programme
- Vision
- A well-informed and self-sustained, healthy
India free from vector borne diseases with
equitable access to quality health care - Mission
- Integrated and accelerated action towards
reducing mortality on account of Malaria,
Japanese Encephalitis, Dengue by half and
elimination of Kala-azar by 2010 and elimination
of Lymphatic Filariasis by 2015
27Strategies of National Vector Borne Disease
Control Programme
- 1. Parasite Elimination and Disease Management
-
- Early case detection and complete treatment
- Strengthening of referral services
- Epidemic preparedness and rapid response
- 2. Integrated Vector Management
- for Transmission Risk Reduction
- Indoor residual spraying in selected high risk
areas - Use of insecticide treated bed nets
- Use of larvivorous fish
- Anti larval measures in urban areas
- Minor environmental engineering
28Strategies of NVBDCP
- 3. Supporting Interventions
- Behaviour Change Communication
- Public Private Partnership
- Human Resource Development through Capacity
Building - Operational Research
- Monitoring and Evaluation through periodic
reviews/field visits and web based Management
Information System
29Strategy
- A one time mass campaign targeting all children
in the age group of 1-15 years in the districts. - Followed by integration of the JE vaccine into
the Routine Immunization Program to cover the new
cohort (children attaining more than 1 year of
age) in the districts covered previously under
the JE vaccination campaign. These children would
be administered the JE vaccine between 1-2 years
of age along with the DPT booster dose, under the
Routine Immunization Programme. - A special campaign has been planned for 2010 in
selected districts in the country to cover left
outs and new cohorts. - Age distribution pattern of the lab confirmed JE
cases will be reviewed to further inform strategy.
30JE vaccination coverage 2006-2009
Year No. of Districts covered till date Total Population Target Population - 1-15 years Total JE vaccination canpaign coverage JE vaccination campaign Reported coverage
2006 11 29420139 9708646 9308688 88.30
2007 27 65934009 21758223 18431087 85
2008 22 57772199 20040262 16881941 84.20
2009 30 45032191 27161011 17441254 64.21
90 198158538 78668142 62062970 78.89