The epidemiology of chikungunya virus in Brazil and potential impact of vaccines

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Abstract

The first chikungunya virus (CHIKV) vaccine is now licensed in Brazil, the country that reports most cases globally, however, the optimal use of the vaccine remains unclear due to a poor understanding of CHIKV epidemiology and population immunity. We quantified the annual CHIKV infection and disease burden since 2014 in each of the 27 Federal Units of Brazil using a mathematical model that integrated serological surveys (N=12), confirmed chikungunya cases (N=488,234) and chikungunya deaths (N=1,719) reported between January 2014 and September 2024. Using this base, we estimated the potential impact of a vaccine over the period 2025-2029 had the population been vaccinated before the 2025 season, evaluating different rollout strategies. We found that 18.3% (95%CrI: 16.5-20.3) of the population has been infected since 2014, with the highest risk concentrated in the Northeast and Southeast. Overall, 1.13% (95%CrI: 1.07-1.19) of infections were detected by surveillance systems, with an increasing probability of symptoms with age and greater risk of symptoms in females. Vaccinating 40% of the population aged >12y (73 million doses), and assuming a vaccine efficacy of 70% against infection and 95% against disease, would avert up to 1.6 million (95%CrI: 0.5-3) cases and 198 (95%CrI: 61-359) deaths over the next five years. Despite widespread circulation, most of the country remains vulnerable to infection. CHIKV vaccination has the potential to substantially reduce disease burden.

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