Studies on prevalence of Hantavirus in small mammals in Southeast Asia: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Zixiao Guo, Hongxin Pan, Nini Wang, Yang Xiao, Qianwen Zhang, Changchun Ren, Puyu Liu, Qun Wu, Lijun Cai, Yang Cheng, Weixia Li, Dingwei Sun

TL;DR
This study finds a 6.07% prevalence of Hantavirus in small mammals across Southeast Asia, with higher rates in Indonesia and Singapore, highlighting the need for stronger surveillance to prevent zoonotic disease spread.
Contribution
The study provides the first comprehensive meta-analysis of Hantavirus prevalence in small mammals across Southeast Asia.
Findings
The pooled prevalence of Hantavirus in small mammals in Southeast Asia is 6.07%.
Indonesia and Singapore have the highest Hantavirus prevalence rates at 17.49% and 10.53%, respectively.
Rodents and ELISA detection methods show higher prevalence rates compared to other species and methods.
Abstract
This study systematically analyzed the prevalence of Hantavirus (HVs) in small mammals across Southeast Asia to evaluate the risks of this zoonotic disease. We searched the Web of Science, PubMed, Embase, Scopus, and Cochrane Library for studies published up to 6 February 2025, extracted data from 28 eligible studies. Meta-analysis revealed a pooled prevalence of HVs was 6.07% (986/11,806) in small mammals in Southeast Asia, with the highest prevalence in Indonesia (17.49%) and Singapore (10.53%). The prevalence was higher in samples detected by Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (10.68%) and in rodents (8.07%). The results of our study highlight the urgency of strengthening surveillance in trade networks with Southeast Asia, particularly in high-risk areas such as Indonesia and Singapore, to mitigate the threat of imported zoonotic diseases. Hantaviruses (HVs) are zoonotic pathogens…
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Taxonomy
TopicsViral Infections and Vectors · Vector-Borne Animal Diseases · Vector-borne infectious diseases
