The First Identification and Retrospective Study of Severe Fever With Thrombocytopenia Syndrome in Japan

Toru Takahashi, Ken Maeda, Tadaki Suzuki, Aki Ishido, Toru Shigeoka, Takayuki Tominaga, Toshiaki Kamei, Masahiro Honda(Yamaguchi Prefecture Central Hospital), Daisuke Ninomiya(Yawata Medical Center), Takenori Sakai(Yawata Medical Center), Takanori Senba(Yawata Medical Center), Shozo Kaneyuki, Shota Sakaguchi(Miyazaki Prefectural Hospital), Akira Satoh, Takanori Hosokawa(Soka Municipal Hospital), Yojiro Kawabe(Ureshino Medical Center), Shintaro Kurihara(Nagasaki University), Koichi Izumikawa(Nagasaki University), Shigeru Kohno(Nagasaki University), Taichi Azuma(Ehime University), Koichiro Suemori(Ehime University), Masaki Yasukawa(Ehime University), Tetsuya Mizutani(Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology), Tsutomu Omatsu(Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology), Yukie Katayama(Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology), Masaharu Miyahara, Masahito Ijuin(Saga University), Kazuko Doi(Red Cross Hospital), Masaru Okuda(Yamaguchi University), Kazunori Umeki(Ministry of Health Labour and Welfare), Tomoya Saito(Ministry of Health Labour and Welfare), Kazuko Fukushima(Ministry of Health Labour and Welfare), Kensuke Nakajima(Ministry of Health Labour and Welfare), Tomoki Yoshikawa, Hideki Tani, Shuetsu Fukushi, Aiko Fukuma, Momoko Ogata, Masayuki Shimojima, Noriko Nakajima, Noriyo Nagata, Harutaka Katano, Hitomi Fukumoto, Yuko Sato, Hideki Hasegawa, Takuya Yamagishi, Kazunori Oishi, Ichiro Kurane, Shigeru Morikawa(National Institute of Infectious Diseases), Masayuki Saijo
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
November 14, 2013
Cited by 940Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is caused by SFTS virus (SFTSV), a novel bunyavirus reported to be endemic in central and northeastern China. This article describes the first identified patient with SFTS and a retrospective study on SFTS in Japan. METHODS: Virologic and pathologic examinations were performed on the patient's samples. Laboratory diagnosis of SFTS was made by isolation/genome amplification and/or the detection of anti-SFTSV immunoglobulin G antibody in sera. Physicians were alerted to the initial diagnosis and asked whether they had previously treated patients with symptoms similar to those of SFTS. RESULTS: A female patient who died in 2012 received a diagnosis of SFTS. Ten additional patients with SFTS were then retrospectively identified. All patients were aged ≥50 years and lived in western Japan. Six cases were fatal. The ratio of males to females was 8:3. SFTSV was isolated from 8 patients. Phylogenetic analyses indicated that all of the Japanese SFTSV isolates formed a genotype independent to those from China. Most patients showed symptoms due to hemorrhage, possibly because of disseminated intravascular coagulation and/or hemophagocytosis. CONCLUSIONS: SFTS has been endemic to Japan, and SFTSV has been circulating naturally within the country.


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