Experts, however, are now questioning whether this standard
assumption understates the actual percentage who become ill, saying
the finding was made nearly a decade ago in a vastly different
setting: a sparsely populated island in Micronesia.
"We have to question that number," said virologist Mauricio Lacerda
Nogueira of the São Jose de Rio Preto medical school in the
Brazilian state of São Paulo. "The reality of an outbreak on a small
island is completely different from that in a big country with many
different types of people, climates and other conditions."
The question is important for authorities in Brazil and elsewhere to
measure the true extent and impact of the outbreak linked to a rise
in cases of the birth defect microcephaly. Knowing the actual
percentage of people who develop symptoms also could better prepare
public health officials for future outbreaks of this poorly
understood virus.
Medical experts said there was reason to believe the widely cited
ratio might not be accurate.
"It was a single study that was done in one place at one time," says
Marc Fischer, an epidemiologist at the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) and an author of the paper on the 2007
outbreak published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2009.
"To establish a better number, it needs to be done in other settings
and with other populations."
Fischer and other researchers said the current outbreak, which has
triggered a global health scare, could lead to a different
evaluation of what percentage of people infected by the virus end up
getting sick.
Because Zika is believed to generate immunity in those who have
already been infected, knowing the rate of infection during this
epidemic also could help doctors calculate how many people might
remain susceptible if the virus returns.
Scientists do not dispute that the calculation made on Micronesia's
Yap Island, where the 2007 study was conducted, was valid for that
outbreak. The paper was peer-reviewed and is one of the few
published studies on a Zika outbreak.
Much remains unknown about Zika, including whether the virus
actually causes microcephaly, a condition marked by abnormally small
heads in babies that can result in developmental problems. Brazil
has said it has confirmed 508 cases of microcephaly believed to have
followed Zika infections and is investigating more than 3,900 other
cases.
IMPACTS ON A LARGER POPULATION
Scientists believe some suspected complications from Zika are only
now surfacing because Brazil, Latin America's largest country, has a
far bigger and denser population than the sites of previous
outbreaks.
Yap Island, an isolated 35 square miles (90 sq km) of land, is home
to just over 7,000 people.
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In that study, researchers obtained blood samples from a random
selection of 557 residents to arrive at an "estimated ratio" of a
single symptomatic person for every 4.4 people who showed laboratory
signs of having been infected with Zika but showed no signs of
sickness.
The ratio on Yap Island also could have been affected by the fact
that blood tests can confuse Zika antibodies with those of similar
infections, like dengue, which previously infected some islanders,
the CDC's Fischer said.
Nikos Vasilakis, a researcher at the Center for Biodefense and
Emerging Infectious Diseases at the University of Texas Medical
Branch, said the percentage of asymptomatic cases for viruses
similar to Zika can fall "anywhere between 40-80 percent, depending
on the location, epidemic, virus circulating, etc."
Without better tools to accurately count the number of Zika
infections, especially among people who may never have shown
symptoms, a new ratio could remain elusive.
Brazilian officials are relying primarily on symptoms to make
clinical diagnoses for most patients. Zika in most people is treated
as a minor illness.
For worrisome cases, such as pregnant women or people showing signs
of neurological complications, doctors seeking to diagnose a
possible Zika infection must use costly and time-consuming genetic
testing. Such testing is available only at major laboratories and is
possible only during the brief window of less than a week when
patients typically exhibit symptoms.
In the absence of faster, more affordable testing, Brazil’s health
ministry has estimated that as many as 1.5 million people may have
been infected so far.
"I am seeing many, many sick people," says Carlos Brito, a physician
in the northeastern Brazilian city of Recife, who was among the
first to notify authorities last year of a mysterious new outbreak.
"It's hard to believe there could be many times more out there
infected."
(Editing by Daniel Flynn and Will Dunham)
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