Autochthonous Dengue Outbreak, Paris Region, France, September–October 2023

In Europe, dengue primarily is imported from endemic countries. However, an increasing number of autochthonous cases and limited outbreaks have been described since 2010. In 2023, 105 autochthonous cases were reported: 66 in Italy, 36 in France; and 3 in Spain (1). We describe an autochthonous outbreak of dengue in the Paris Region of France during September–October 2023.

On September 13, 2023, a 36-year-old woman from Limeil-Brévannes, a city 15 km south of Paris, who had no consistent medical history started having symptoms of fever (>38°C), malaise, and headache. Her 7-year-old son experienced the same symptoms during September 11–13 and had a maculopapular rash that disappeared 5 days after the onset. Also, the woman’s partner had symptoms begin on September 14 and had a fever (>38°C), chills, frontal headache, myalgia, a papular rash, and itching on the trunk and upper limbs. The case-patients reported no travel abroad or to other regions of France.

On September 19, the woman continued to be feverish daily and began to have nausea and vomiting. She consulted the emergency department of Hôpital Henri Mondor, Créteil, south of Paris, where blood tests were performed. Tests revealed thrombocytopenia (105,000 cells/μL; reference range 150,000–450,000 cells/μL), leukopenia (700/μL; reference range 1,000–4,000 U/L), and increased alanine aminotransferase (213 U/L; reference range <35 U/L), aspartate aminotransferase (266 U/L; reference range <35 U/L), and gamma-glutamyl transferase (135 U/L; reference range <40 U/L). C-reactive protein was 2.4 mg/L (reference range <5 mg/L). Major and common causes of viral hepatitis were excluded, and serologic tests for hepatitis A–C, HIV, and cytomegalovirus were negatives. Epstein-Barr virus serology was compatible with a previous infection.

Because a diagnosis was not made during clinical examination, we performed arbovirus serologic testing, including for dengue virus (DENV), on September 22. DENV serologic results were IgM positive; thus, we performed a retrospective analysis of blood samples collected on September 19. In that analysis, results for DENV nonstructural protein 1 (NS1) antigen in plasma were positive, as was the real-time reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR), which could identify DENV type 2 (cycle threshold 35), confirming the diagnosis of acute DENV infection.

We performed a second serologic test 25 days after symptom onset, which showed seroconversion for DENV, IgM persistence, and apparition of IgG (Table). The patient’s son and partner also had DENV serologic testing on October 13, and results were IgM and IgG positive. All 3 patients fully recovered, and no case was classified as severe dengue.

According to national guidelines, we made a notification to the national health authority of France on October 16, which prompted a door-to-door survey in the family’s neighborhood during October 19–20. Pesticide spraying for mosquito control was also performed in the neighborhood.

In Europe, since 2010, autochthonous dengue cases have been reported in several countries (13). In France, a case was reported in Nice in 2010, after which the number of case reports has been increasing, and 9 events of autochthonous DENV transmission were identified in 2022, resulting in 65 autochthonous cases (3,4). To date, all autochthonous dengue cases occurred in the south of France, and none had been described in the Paris Region.

In the reported family cluster, the virus was probably introduced into mainland France through viremic travelers returning from an endemic area. Indeed, among countries that reported a considerable increase in dengue cases in recent years, some are overseas territories of France (5,6). In an ongoing 2023 outbreak in Martinique and Guadeloupe, DENV-2 serotype has been identified in most cases (7). The cluster we report was caused by DENV-2, but past autochthonous DENV transmission events in France were caused by DENV-1 and DENV-3 (4). Clinicians should consider the serotype of DENV because infection with any DENV serotype will cause an adaptive immune response to develop, which provides short-term immunity against heterologous DENV serotypes (8,9). In addition, priming with 1 DENV serotype can increase the risk for severe dengue upon future infection with a heterologous virus (8,9).

Dengue is transmitted by the bite of an infected female mosquito. The Aedes aegypti mosquito, the primary vector, has not been established in continental Europe (10,11). Ae. albopictus, a less competent vector, might act as an epidemic driver in areas where Ae. aegypti is absent (10,11). Since the 1990s, Ae. albopictus has increasingly been detected in Europe and France. In 2022, Ae. albopictus was found in 71 of 95 French departments, and since 2015, it has been found in the area where the described family lives (12).

Two main elements might contribute to an increasing risk for autochthonous arbovirus transmission: intensification in international travel observed in recent decades and more stable vector mosquito populations outside previously known endemic areas. International travel raises arbovirus importation in nonendemic countries, and global warming could contribute to establishment of a more stable vector population, such as Ae. albopictus, in France. Those factors underline several points from this case report.

Like most viral infections, dengue has a large spectrum of clinical manifestations, as seen in the cases we report. Most persons remain asymptomatic or develop minor symptoms, but ≈25% experience a self-limited febrile illness, accompanied by mild-to-moderate hematologic and biochemical abnormalities (13). Faced with compatible clinical cases without other confirmed diagnoses, clinicians in nonendemic areas should also test for an arbovirus infection during summer and autumn. Case detection is crucial for implementing the necessary public health measures to prevent further virus transmission.

The choice of laboratory test depends on the number of days after illness onset. Before day 7, dengue can be diagnosed by detection of viral RNA or antigens (13). DENV IgM antibodies start to rise from day 4, peak around days 10–14, and then decline and disappear after ≈3 months. In primary infections, dengue IgG can be detected at low concentrations by the end of the second week; the concentration increases slowly thereafter and is thought to persist for life (13). Often, paired acute and convalescent samples are required if direct detection of the virus is not available. Diagnosis can be accelerated when clinicians make every effort to obtain RT-PCR or antigenic testing, including reanalyzing samples taken in the viremic phase, when possible, which enables diagnosis without waiting for seroconversion.

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