Tick-borne encephalitis epidemic in Hungary 1951-2021: The story and lessons learned

Zoonoses Public Health. 2023 Feb;70(1):81-92. doi: 10.1111/zph.13003. Epub 2022 Oct 7.

Abstract

The authors analysed epidemiological data of the Hungarian tick-borne encephalitis epidemic from the past seven decades. A total of 911 meningitis serosa cases were described from 1930-1950 s by local hospital physicians, indicating that the virus had been present in the country decades before its official identification in 1952. The virus spread freely in the 1950s-1960s, occupying almost all habitats where ticks occurred in large numbers. The increasing number of cases drove authorities to classify this illness as a notifiable disease in 1977 and to organize the first measures to stop the epidemic. Statistical analysis revealed that the large-scale vaccination launched from the 1990s was responsible for the sharp decrease in the number of human cases from 1997. A significant negative correlation was found between the number of vaccine doses sold and human cases 6 years later. The TBEV endemic area covers 16.57% of the territory and 16.65% of the population of the country. In the last 10 years, 186,000 vaccine doses/year in average were enough to keep the incidence of human TBEV infections between 0.45 and 0.06/100,000 persons. A 20-year-long study found evidence for easing clinical signs in TBEV-infected hospitalized patients. Statistics found a sharp decrease in the number of samples sent for TBEV diagnosis after 1989. Male dominance of patients was characteristic of the epidemics since the 1940s, but now analysis of detailed data from the 1981-2021 period (60.5%-87.5%) proved the statistical significance of this dominance. Obviously, the voluntary vaccination programme was the tool which broke the spread of the epidemic. Widespread public awareness of the disease and the tick vector, probable evolutionary spread of less pathogenic virus strains supplemented with the vaccination campaign led to a negligible level of human TBE cases in Hungary in the last years.

Keywords: epidemic; milk-acquired cases; statistical analysis; tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV); vaccination.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Encephalitis Viruses, Tick-Borne*
  • Encephalitis, Tick-Borne* / epidemiology
  • Encephalitis, Tick-Borne* / veterinary
  • Epidemics*
  • Humans
  • Hungary / epidemiology
  • Ixodes*
  • Male
  • Vaccines*

Substances

  • Vaccines