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Epidemiology of Seasonal Influenza in the Middle East and North Africa Regions, 2010-2016: Circulating Influenza A and B Viruses and Spatial Timing of Epidemics

Overview
Publisher Wiley
Specialty Microbiology
Date 2018 Feb 7
PMID 29405575
Citations 34
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Abstract

Background: There is a limited knowledge regarding the epidemiology of influenza in Middle East and North Africa.

Objectives: We described the patterns of influenza circulation and the timing of seasonal epidemics in countries of Middle East and North Africa.

Methods: We used virological surveillance data for 2010-2016 from the WHO FluNet database. In each country, we calculated the median proportion of cases that were caused by each virus type and subtype; determined the timing and amplitude of the primary and secondary peaks; and used linear regression models to test for spatial trends in the timing of epidemics.

Results: We included 70 532 influenza cases from seventeen countries. Influenza A and B accounted for a median 76.5% and 23.5% of cases in a season and were the dominant type in 86.8% and 13.2% of seasons. The proportion of influenza A cases that were subtyped was 85.9%, while only 4.4% of influenza B cases were characterized. For most countries, influenza seasonality was similar to the Northern Hemisphere, with a single large peak between January and March; exceptions were the countries in the Arabian Peninsula and Jordan, all of which showed clear secondary peaks, and some countries had an earlier primary peak (in November-December in Bahrain and Qatar). The direction of the timing of influenza activity was east to west and south to north in 2012-2013 and 2015-2016, and west to east in 2014-2015.

Conclusions: The epidemiology of influenza is generally uniform in countries of Middle East and North Africa, with influenza B playing an important role in the seasonal disease burden.

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