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From: TSS (216-119-162-40.ipset44.wt.net)
Subject: THE INCUBATION PERIOD OF KURU
Date: July 19, 2002 at 1:11 pm PST

The Incubation Period of Kuru

Jérôme N. Huillard d´Aignaux
1,2; Simon N. Cousens2; Jean Maccario3; Dominique Costagliola4; Michael P. Alpers5; Peter G. Smith2; Annick Alpérovitch1

From 1INSERM U360, Hôpital de la Salpêtrière, 75651 Paris Cedex 13, France,
2 London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Infectious Disease Epidemiology Unit, Keppel Street, London WC1E 7HT, United Kingdom,
3INSERM U472, 16 Av Paul Vaillant Couturier, 94807 Villejuif Cedex, France,
4 INSERM U444 and SC4, Faculté de Médecine Saint-Antoine, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, 27 Rue Chaligny, 75571 Paris Cedex 12, France,
5 Centre for International Health, Division of Health Sciences Curtin University of Technology, G PO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia.

EPIDEMIOLOGY 2002;13:402-408

Background. Kuru is a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy that was identified in Papua New Guinea in the late 1950s. Several thousand cases of the disease occurred during a period of several decades. Epidemiologic investigations implicated ritual endocannibalistic funeral feasts as the likely route through which the infectious agent was spread.

Methods. We estimated the incubation period distribution of kuru using a back-calculation model and explored the relation among sex, age at infection, and incubation period. Key assumptions in the model were that the number of new kuru infections in a year was proportional to the number of kuru cases dying that year, and that the epidemic arose from a single case of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease occurring around 1900.

Results. The mean incubation period of kuru was estimated at between 10.3 and 13.2 years. Point estimates of the 90th percentile ranged from 21.1 to 27.0 years. The incubation period in females was estimated to be shorter than that in males. The shortest incubation periods were estimated in adult women, who may have been exposed to the largest doses of infectious material.

Conclusions. Our findings suggest that the relatively young age of cases of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease probably reflects increased levels of exposure in young people, rather than age-dependency in the incubation period.

Key words: Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease; statistical model; incubation period; kuru; prion; transmissible spongiform encephalopathies

Epidemiology 2002 July;13(4):402-408
Copyright © 2002 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
All rights reserved

http://www.iseepi.org/index1.htm

TSS




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