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Clinical features of yellow fever in cases from Bolivia, Ecuador, Colombia, and Peru (2023–2025): A descriptive retrospective study

  • Alfonso J. Rodriguez-Morales
  • , Boris Chang-Cheng
  • , Rosmery Gross
  • , Oscar Eduardo Llanque-Espinoza
  • , Jesus Villamil-Macareno
  • , Cristian Pacheco-Jimenez
  • , Gabriela Belén Pineda-Bersoza
  • , Nelson Fernando Delgado-Torres
  • , Ivan Camilo Sanchez-Rojas
  • , Catherin Lorena Solarte-Jimenez
  • , Eibar Camilo Chamorro-Velazco
  • , Glinys Edith Diaz-Llerena
  • , Cristian Daniel Arevalo
  • , Olga Lucia Cuasquer-Posos
  • , Jorge Luis Bonilla-Aldana
  • , D. Katterine Bonilla-Aldana
  • , Franklin Rómulo Aguilar-Gamboa
  • , Johana E. Aparicio-Sigueñas
  • , Miguel Villegas-Chiroque
  • , Sergio Luis Aguilar-Martinez
  • Juan Pablo Escalera-Antezana, Rodrigo Daniel Montesinos-Jove, Carlos Eduardo Gonzales-Flores, Claudia Nathaly Arauco-Gutierrez, Jorge Luis Aviles-Sarmiento, Claudia Marcela Montenegro-Narvaez, Hugo Antonio Castro-Calderón, Nestor Freddy Armijo-Subieta, Lysien Zambrano, Juan Esteban Callejas-Patiño, James Mosquera-Suárez, Wilmer E. Villamil-Gómez

Research output: Contribution to journalOriginal Articlepeer-review

8 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background Yellow fever (YF) persists as a major arboviral threat in South America, despite the availability of an effective vaccine. While Brazil has produced extensive clinical descriptions, data from Bolivia, Ecuador, Colombia, and Peru remain limited. Methods We conducted a descriptive retrospective multicenter analysis of laboratory-confirmed YF cases reported between January 2023 and August 2025 in four Andean countries. Demographic, epidemiological, clinical, and laboratory data were extracted from hospital and surveillance records. Results Twenty-one confirmed cases were identified: Bolivia (n = 8), Ecuador (n = 5), Colombia (n = 4), and Peru (n = 4). The median age was 25 years (IQR: 16–43), with a predominance of males (81 %). Vaccination history was largely undocumented; 86 % had unknown or absent records. The median delay from symptom onset to hospitalization was 5 days. Outcomes were severe, with a case fatality rate of 57 % (12/21), and the median time from symptom onset to death was 8 days. Early manifestations included fever (71 %), arthralgia (19 %), headache (19 %), and myalgia (19 %). During the toxic phase (severe disease), hemorrhage (86 %), jaundice (62 %), circulatory collapse (57 %), and hepatic dysfunction (52 %) predominated. Complications included intracranial hemorrhage, multiorgan dysfunction, sepsis, and renal failure. Laboratory findings revealed marked hepatic injury (AST median, 3257 U/L; ALT median, 1570 U/L), hyperbilirubinemia, metabolic acidosis, elevated lactate levels, hypoglycemia, and coagulopathy. RT-PCR for YFV was positive in 95 % of tested cases. Conclusions This study provides one of the first systematic clinical characterizations of YF cases from Bolivia, Ecuador, Colombia, and Peru. The high fatality rate, despite the young age of patients, underscores the vulnerability of populations in resource-limited, peri-Amazonian settings. Severe hepatic dysfunction, hemorrhage, and systemic collapse were consistent hallmarks of the disease. These findings highlight the urgent need to strengthen vaccination coverage, enhance clinical recognition, and expand access to critical care in outbreak-prone areas of South America.

Original languageAmerican English
Article number101651
JournalNew Microbes and New Infections
Volume68
DOIs
StateIndexed - Dec 2025
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors.

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • Arboviral diseases
  • Case fatality
  • Clinical features
  • Hemorrhagic fever
  • Hepatic dysfunction
  • South America
  • Yellow fever

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