Powassan and Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus Seroprevalence in Endemic Areas, United States, 2019–2020
Hannah Padda, Claire Y.-H. Huang, Kacie Grimm, Brad J. Biggerstaff, Jeremy P. Ledermann, Janae Raetz, Karen Boroughs, Eric C. Mossel, Stacey W. Martin, Jennifer A. Lehman, Rebecca L. Townsend, David Krysztof, Paula Saá, Emily T.N. Dinh, Mary Grace Stobierski

TL;DR
This study measured how common Powassan and Eastern equine encephalitis viruses are in blood donors from areas where these viruses are common in the U.S.
Contribution
The study provides new seroprevalence data for two arboviruses in endemic U.S. regions, highlighting potential transmission risks through blood transfusions and organ donations.
Findings
Powassan virus seroprevalence ranged from 0% to 11.5% across four states.
Eastern equine encephalitis virus was detected in one county with an estimated seroprevalence of 1.62%.
Low overall seroprevalence suggests limited transmission risk, but higher-prevalence areas may need further study.
Abstract
Powassan virus (POWV) and Eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV) are regionally endemic arboviruses in the United States that can cause neuroinvasive disease and death. Recent identification of EEEV transmission through organ transplantation and POWV transmission through blood transfusion have increased concerns about infection risk. After historically high numbers of cases of both viruses were reported in 2019, we conducted a seroprevalence survey using blood donation samples from selected endemic counties. Specimens were screened for virus-specific neutralizing antibodies, and population seroprevalence was estimated using weights calibrated to county population census data. For POWV, median county seroprevalence in 4 states was 0.84%, ranging from 0% (95% CI 0%–2.28%) to 11.5% (95% CI 0.82%–40.9%). EEEV infection was identified in a single county (estimated seroprevalence 1.62% [95%…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
Click any figure to enlarge with its caption.
Figure 1
Figure 2Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsViral Infections and Vectors · Mosquito-borne diseases and control · Animal Disease Management and Epidemiology
