Seasonality of sporotrichosis in Brazil: A modelled analysis of the epidemic in São Paulo, 2011–2020

Author:

de Freitas Vera Lúcia Teixeira1,Rocha Francisco Marcelo Monteiro2,Ribeiro Emanoella Nogueira3,Lindoso José Angelo Laulleta45,Bittencourt Amanda Azevedo5,Pivetta Dhara Nicole Araujo Greco3,Benard Gil3,de Freitas‐Xavier Roseli Santos3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Infectious and Parasitic Diseases, Medical School University of Sao Paulo Sao Paulo Brazil

2. Paulista School of Politics, Economics and Business Federal University of São Paulo São Paulo Brazil

3. Medical Mycology Laboratory (LIM 53/HCFMUSP) and Institute Tropical Medicine University of Sao Paulo Sao Paulo Brazil

4. Laboratory of Protozoology (LIM 49/HCFMUSP), Institute of Tropical Medicine, Medical School University of São Paulo São Paulo Brazil

5. Emilio Ribas Institute of Infectious Diseases São Paulo Brazil

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundSporotrichosis is an endemic subcutaneous mycosis classically caused by the Sporothrix schenckii species complex. Recently, sporotrichosis has emerged in Brazil as a cat‐transmitted epidemic caused by a new species, Sporothrix brasiliensis.ObjectivesTo survey the clinical‐epidemiological profile of all sporotrichosis cases diagnosed between 2011 and 2020 at a reference hospital in São Paulo metropolitan area and evaluate the annual distribution of cases in relation to seasonality.MethodsPatients' demographic and clinical‐epidemiological data were surveyed. A generalized linear model was fitted to relate the quarterly number of sporotrichosis cases detected between 2015 and 2019 with precipitation and temperature series. Prediction of the number of cases from 2011 to 2014 was attempted based on the fitted model without the trend component that appears from 2015.ResultsAmong 271 suspected cases admitted during 2011–2020, 254 were confirmed by fungal isolation and/or clinical‐epidemiological criteria. We observed that 2015 onwards the number of cases regularly increased during Autumn and Winter, the driest and coldest stations of the year. We verified that temperature series affected the number of cases (p = .005) because an increase of 1°C in the temperature series was associated with a 14.24% decrease in the average cases number, with the average number of cases increasing by 10.96% (p < .0001) every quarter, corresponding to an annual increase of 52%. Between 2011 and 2014, the predicted number of sporotrichosis cases averaged 10–12 per year, with 33%–38% occurring in the winter.ConclusionWe hypothesize that sporotrichosis seasonality is associated with the felines' oestrus cycle, which may provide alternative, cat‐directed approaches to the sporotrichosis epidemic control.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Dermatology,General Medicine

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