4.6 Article

Enterovirus Surveillance (EVSurv) in Germany

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9102005

Keywords

Germany; enterovirus; surveillance; viral meningitis; aseptic meningitis; acute flaccid paralysis; AFP; poliovirus eradication

Categories

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Health

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The primary aim of enterovirus surveillance in Germany is to verify the absence of poliovirus circulation within the Global Polio Eradication Program. Through a network of quality-assured laboratories, samples from patients with suspected meningitis or paralysis are screened for enterovirus, leading to the detection of various serotypes. This surveillance provides continuous data on the epidemiology of non-polio enteroviruses, with children under 15 years old being the majority of those studied.
The major aim of the enterovirus surveillance (EVSurv) in Germany is to prove the absence of poliovirus circulation in the framework of the Global Polio Eradication Program (GPEI). Therefore, a free-of-charge enterovirus diagnostic is offered to all hospitals for patients with symptoms compatible with a polio infection. Within the quality proven laboratory network for enterovirus diagnostic (LaNED), stool and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from patients with suspected aseptic meningitis/encephalitis or acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) are screened for enterovirus (EV), typing is performed in all EV positive sample to exclude poliovirus infections. Since 2006, & AP;200 hospitals from all 16 German federal states have participated annually. On average, 2500 samples (70% stool, 28% CSF) were tested every year. Overall, the majority of the patients studied are children < 15 years. During the 15-year period, 53 different EV serotypes were detected. While EV-A71 was most frequently detected in infants, E30 dominated in older children and adults. Polioviruses were not detected. The German enterovirus surveillance allows monitoring of the circulation of clinically relevant serotypes resulting in continuous data about non-polio enterovirus epidemiology.

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