# Oropouche Virus Importation in Southern Brazil and Emerging Concern Calling for Enhanced Public Health Surveillance

**Authors:** Franciellen Machado dos Santos, Elverson Soares de Melo, Gustavo Barbosa de Lima, Alexandre Freitas da Silva, Marcelo Henrique Santos Paiva, Bartolomeu Acioli‐Santos, Clarice Neuenschwander Lins de Moraes, Amanda Pellenz Ruivo, Tatiana Schäffer Gregianini, Milena Bauermann, Thales Bermann, Valeska Lizzi Lagranha, Ludmila Fiorenzano Baethgen, Fernanda Godinho, Gabriel da Luz Wallau, Ana Beatriz Gorini da Veiga, Richard Steiner Salvato

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/jmv.70557 · Journal of Medical Virology · 2025-08-11

## TL;DR

Oropouche virus, previously confined to the Amazon, has emerged in southern Brazil, highlighting the need for improved surveillance to prevent outbreaks.

## Contribution

The study reports the first human case of Oropouche virus in southern Brazil and demonstrates the effectiveness of pooled-sample surveillance for early detection.

## Key findings

- The first human case of Oropouche virus was detected in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.
- Pooled-sample surveillance proved effective for monitoring virus introduction during low circulation periods.
- Phylogenetic analysis indicated the virus was introduced via travel from the Amazon region.

## Abstract

Oropouche virus (OROV), an arthropod‐borne virus transmitted by Culicoides paraensis, is an endemic arbovirus that historically circulates mostly in the Amazon basin. Between 2022 and 2024, it reemerged as a more widespread public health concern in South America. We conducted a pooled‐sample molecular surveillance study to understand the prevalence of Oropouche fever in Brazil's southernmost state. Over 18 months, we analyzed 4060 samples to monitor the virus emergence in the Rio Grande do Sul state. We detected the first human case of OROV in the state, and our phylogenetic reconstruction indicated a travel‐related introduction from the Amazon region into Rio Grande do Sul. Despite the absence of local transmission, the invasion of Culicoides paraensis and enzootic circulation of the OROV in Rio Grande do Sul highlight the risk of Oropouche fever outbreaks in the region. We demonstrated that pooled‐sample surveillance effectively monitors virus introduction during periods of low endemic circulation, serving as an essential active surveillance tool for the timely detection of virus emergence and enhancing public health preparedness. The multiple introductions of distinct OROV lineages into southern Brazil underscore the importance of genomic surveillance and public health strategies to monitor and mitigate arbovirus spread in the region.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Oropouche fever (MONDO:0000345)
- **Species:** Culicoides paraensis (taxon 1027879), Oropouche virus (taxon 118655)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Oropouche fever (MESH:D002044)
- **Species:** Oropouche virus (no rank) [taxon 118655], Culicoides paraensis (species) [taxon 1027879], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

38 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12338014/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12338014