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Dengue is coming to Europe

Published November 28, 2023last updated June 13, 2024

Warmer conditions are helping the Aedes albopictus mosquito, which transmits dengue, chikungunya and Zika viruses thrive, said the EU health agency.

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An Aedes albopictus mosquito sitting on a person's skin
The Aedes albopictus mosquito is a dengue spreader — and it's establishing a population in EuropeImage: US CfDCaP/epa efe/dpa/picture-alliance

Travel-related cases of dengue, like travel-related cases of malaria, are not uncommon in Europe. People get home from a trip to a hotspot, they come down with dengue, rest for a few days and then get back to their normal lives.

Problems arise when dengue-infected individuals find themselves in a statistically unlikely situation: the weather in their home country is warm, they live in an urban area, or they get bitten — at home — by an Aedes mosquito, which then carries the dengue virus to another person.

The chance of all these circumstances coming together in Europe is very low.

Cases of locally transmitted dengue on the European mainland were rare, as statistics collected between 2015 and 2019 show: European countries where the mosquito that spreads dengue is established, saw about 3,000 cases of travel-related dengue, but only 9 cases of local transmitted dengue.

But in 2022, cases rose higher than in the past seven decades on the European mainland combined — with 65 cases in France alone.

In 2023, the number of cases rose even higher to 130 cases, largely in France and Italy, and a handful in Spain.

By June 2024, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) said countries had already reported an increased number of imported dengue cases. But it was too early in the year for data on any locally acquired cases — the earliest we would see that data would be at the end of the year.

But the ECDC's Director Andrea Ammon said that "increased international travel from dengue-endemic countries will also increase the risk of imported cases, and inevitably also the risk of local outbreaks."

Dengue is not endemic in Europe — the virus cannot live on its own here, it needs a so-called "vector", a body in which to live, such as someone who is bitten by a mosquito in a dengue-endemic region and comes home with dengue in their blood. 

This is how dengue spreads in a non-endemic region

Dengue is generally transmitted through the Aedes mosquito.

In order for local transmission to occur in Europe, the mosquito needs to have established itself in the community. That means, it needs to be able to live, breed and survive there. There are different types of Aedes mosquito, but the one most widespread in Europe is the aedes albopictus.

Temperatures need to be high — between 15 and 35 degrees Celsius — for the mosquitos to thrive, so the threat is restricted to warmer months.

And the virus has to be introduced into the community. Because dengue is not endemic in Europe, this occurs when a traveler brings the virus from abroad.

Dengue is a viral infection that can involve high fever, headache and nausea, but the majority of cases are asymptomatic. Death is extremely rare but can occur in situations in which severe illness — also rare — goes untreated.

Why are numbers so high?

Experts say there are a lot of potential explanations for 2023's rise in locally transmitted dengue cases, but that there's no clear answer yet.

"I believe that what we saw in southern France this past summer [2023] and in other parts of southern Europe is part of a threshold phenomenon," Thomas Jaenisch, a professor of global health at the Colorado School of Public Health, told DW. "It is true that temperatures have been rising for a long time, but we have more and more [other] factors acting together synergistically."

Research conducted by Jaenisch helped provide evidence for the WHO's dengue classification of 2009, which distinguishes between severe and non-severe dengue.

Jaenisch said that weather, growing mosquito populations, increased occurrence of the virus abroad and vector control all offer some potential explanation of the trend observed over the past two years. We'll explain each of these threats below.

Higher temperatures

Higher temperatures, not only during the day but also at night, may contribute to the spread of dengue in southern Europe. Longer stints of high temperatures offer more time for the mosquitoes to breed, ultimately resulting in more mosquitoes as summers start early and stretch late into fall.

Expansion of established mosquito populations

"The Aedes albopictus mosquito was first detected in Europe in the early 2000s," said Oliver Brady, a professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, who leads the Dengue Mapping and Modelling Group.

"It has since spread to many more areas around the Mediterranean and Central Europe and has increased in abundance in areas close to larger population centers," he told DW.

The Aedes mosquito population is currently established in all of Italy, Croatia, Bosnia, Albania, Slovenia, Hungary and in the majority of France. Since 2017, it has been established in Switzerland, parts of southern Germany and Austria.

However, unlike other types of mosquitoes, the Aedes doesn't venture far from its breeding area over its lifetime — only around 100 meters — which means it may take longer for it to spread to other areas, said Marianne Comparet, director of The International Society for Neglected Tropical Diseases.

This may help explain why we are just now seeing a heightened number of cases, Comparet told DW.

More travel-related transmission of the virus

Increased spread of dengue in Europe also depends on the increased spread of dengue in countries where the virus is endemic. The more dengue in a place, the more likely travelers are to become infected and bring it home.

"Dengue cases outside of Europe have doubled between 2010 and 2022, meaning we are now much more likely to see introduction of the virus," said Brady.

Cases reported to the WHO increased from around 500,000 cases globally in 2000 to 5.2 million in 2019. So far, cases reported in 2023 total more than 4.5 million.

But the WHO says cases are under-reported and estimates the actual number per year is probably closer to nearly 400 million worldwide.

Vector control and awareness

Vector control describes measures used to limit or eradicate human contact with the "vector," the thing that transmits a disease — in this case the mosquito.  

Research suggests that European communities do not know how to respond to emerging public health threats.

For example, Comparet cited an example where health officials in Paris fumigated the home of a person who had arrived back with dengue in August 2023. It was the first time insecticide had been used in this fashion in the French capital to fight the spread of the virus. But it may have been an unsuitable response, said Comparet, because the fumigation was done at night — but the Aedes species is most active during the day.

Comparet said doctors across Europe should increase their awareness of the symptoms of dengue, because most cases are mild or asymptomatic and therefore hard to spot if you don't know what to watch out for.

Jaenisch said we don't even know how the threat will develop over the summers — and warm springs and autumns — to come.

"Honestly, we could be witnessing a stochastic event that will not repeat itself in the next 2-3 years and then again materialize," said Jaenisch.

Even if no one knows for sure, though, it pays to be aware.

Fighting mosquitoes with mosquitoes

Edited by: Zulfikar Abbany

This article was originally published November 28, 2023, and then updated with new ECDC data and a map showing where the aedes albopictus mosquito had established itself in Europe, June 12 and 13, 2024. 

Clare Roth
Clare Roth Editor and reporter focused on science, migration and US politics