気候温暖化によりカリフォルニア州でデング熱感染拡大の可能性 (As California warms, cases of dengue fever are expected to grow)

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2026-06-09 カリフォルニア大学バークレー校(UCB)

米国の University of California, Berkeley の研究チームは、気候変動による気温上昇に伴い、カリフォルニア州でデング熱の発生リスクが今後大幅に高まる可能性を示した。デング熱は主にネッタイシマカやヒトスジシマカによって媒介される感染症であり、従来は熱帯・亜熱帯地域に多かったが、温暖化によって媒介蚊の生息域や活動期間が拡大している。研究では気候モデルと感染症伝播モデルを組み合わせて将来予測を行い、特に都市部や人口密集地域で感染リスクが増加することを明らかにした。また、気温上昇は蚊の繁殖速度やウイルス増殖を促進し、感染拡大を後押しする可能性がある。研究者らは、監視体制の強化、蚊の防除対策、公衆衛生上の早期警戒システムの整備が重要であると指摘している。今回の成果は、気候変動が感染症分布に与える影響を定量的に示し、将来の公衆衛生対策に重要な知見を提供するものである。

<関連情報>

気候変動と土地利用の変化下におけるカリフォルニアのデング熱感染リスク:半機械論的モデリング研究 Dengue transmission risk in California under climate and land-use change: a semi-mechanistic modelling study

Lisa I. Couper ∙ Terrell J. Sipin ∙ Samantha Sambado ∙ Zoe Rennie ∙ Kyle M. Shanebeck ∙ Kelsey P. Lyberger ∙ et al.
The Lancet Regional Health – Americas  Published:May 25, 2026
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lana.2026.101509

気候温暖化によりカリフォルニア州でデング熱感染拡大の可能性 (As California warms, cases of dengue fever are expected to grow)

Summary

Background

Dengue cases are increasing in non-endemic regions due to environmental change and increasing travel and trade. For these non-endemic regions, estimating dengue risk is challenging as transmission is driven by both local environmental conditions and the introduction of viremic travelers. In this study, we aimed to estimate current and future dengue risk in California, USA—a region that has recently experienced its first cases of locally-acquired dengue.

Methods

We modeled dengue risk as the product of three key components needed for local transmission—vector presence, temperature-suitability for pathogen transmission, and viral introductions via travel-associated cases—estimated using vector and case surveillance, sociodemographic, and environmental data. We estimated risk for locations and months where local transmission was reported in 2023–2024 to define a ‘threshold’ level of risk. We then projected monthly, census tract-level risk under both current conditions and future scenarios of climate warming and urban expansion.

Findings

Approximately 18.2 million (95% CI: 17.9–18.3) California residents—primarily in the Central Valley and the Los Angeles and San Diego metropolitan areas—currently live in areas where peak monthly dengue risk exceeds levels estimated during observed local transmission. Under moderate scenarios of climate warming and urban expansion, an additional 4.1 million (95% CI: 3.7–4.6) residents may be at risk by mid-century. Outside the summer months and beyond the Central Valley and southern California, current and future risk remains low due to one or more major bottlenecks to transmission.

Interpretation

Our study identifies the specific regions and months conducive to dengue transmission in the non-endemic setting of California. At present, this covers a substantial portion of the state and is projected to expand under ongoing climate warming and urbanization. Our results underscore the need for sustained vector control, and timely detection of travel-associated cases.

Funding

National Science Foundation, National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

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