Sapovirus infections in Japan before and after the emergence of the COVID‐19 pandemic: An alarming update

Author:

Hoque Sheikh Ariful12,Pham Ngan Thi Kim1,Onda‐Shimizu Yuko1,Nishimura Shuichi2,Sugita Kumiko3,Kobayashi Masaaki3,Islam Mohammad Tajul4,Okitsu Shoko1ORCID,Khamrin Pattara5,Maneekarn Niwat5,Hayakawa Satoshi1,Ushijima Hiroshi1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology and Microbiology Division of Microbiology, Nihon University School of Medicine Tokyo Japan

2. Cell and Tissue Culture Research, Centre for Advanced Research in Sciences (CARS) University of Dhaka Dhaka Bangladesh

3. Division of Microbiology Nihon University School of Medicine, Japanese Viral Gastritis Group Tokyo Japan

4. Department of Public Health North South University Dhaka Bangladesh

5. Department of Microbiology Faculty of Medicine, Chiang Mai University Thailand

Abstract

AbstractAn increasing trend of sapovirus (SaV) infections in Japanese children during 2009−2019, particularly after the introduction of the voluntary rotavirus (RV)‐vaccination program has been observed. Herein, we investigated the epidemiological situation of SaV infections from 2019 to 2022 when people adopted a precautionary lifestyle due to the emergence of the COVID‐19 pandemic, and RV vaccines had been implemented as routine vaccines. Stool samples were collected from children who attended outpatient clinics with acute gastroenteritis and analyzed by reverse transcriptase‐polymerase chain reaction to determine viral etiology. Among 961 stool samples, 80 (8.3%) were positive for SaV: 2019−2020 (6.5%), 2020−2021 (0%), and 2021−2022 (12.8%). The trend of SaV infection in Japanese children yet remained upward with statistical significance (p = 0.000). The major genotype was GI.1 (75%) which caused a large outbreak in Kyoto between December 2021 and February 2022. Phylogenetic, gene sequence and deduced amino acid sequence analyses suggested that these GI.1 strains detected in the outbreak and other places during 2021−2022 or 2019−2020 remained genetically identical and widely spread. This study reveals that SaV infection is increasing among Japanese children which is a grave concern and demands immediate attention to be paid before SaV attains a serious public health problem.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Virology

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