Seroprevalence of tick-borne encephalitis virus in wild and domestic animals in northern Germany

被引:7
|
作者
Topp, Anna-Katharina [1 ]
Springer, Andrea [1 ]
Mischke, Reinhard [2 ]
Rieder, Johanna [2 ]
Feige, Karsten [3 ]
Ganter, Martin [4 ]
Nagel-Kohl, Uschi [5 ]
Nordhoff, Marcel [6 ]
Boelke, Matthias [1 ]
Becker, Stefanie [1 ]
Pachnicke, Stefan [7 ]
Schunack, Bettina [8 ]
Dobler, Gerhard [9 ]
Strube, Christina [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Vet Med Hannover, Inst Parasitol, Ctr Infect Med, Buenteweg 17, D-30559 Hannover, Germany
[2] Univ Vet Med Hannover, Clin Small Anim, D-30559 Hannover, Germany
[3] Univ Vet Med Hannover, Clin Horses, D-30559 Hannover, Germany
[4] Univ Vet Med Hannover, Clin Swine & Small Ruminants, D-30173 Hannover, Germany
[5] Vet Inst Hannover, Lower Saxony State Off Consumer Protect & Food Saf, D-30173 Hannover, Germany
[6] Food & Vet Inst Oldenburg, Lower Saxony State Off Consumer Protect & Food Saf, D-26133 Oldenburg, Germany
[7] Elanco Deutschland GmbH, D-40789 Monheim, Germany
[8] Bayer Anim Hlth GmbH, Elanco Anim Hlth, D-40789 Monheim, Germany
[9] Bundeswehr Inst Microbiol, Natl Reference Lab TBEV, D-80937 Munich, Germany
关键词
TBE; Ticks; Tick -borne diseases; Public health; Sentinels; Wild boar; Roe deer; Dog; Horse; GAME; PREVALENCE; HORSES;
D O I
10.1016/j.ttbdis.2023.102220
中图分类号
R51 [传染病];
学科分类号
100401 ;
摘要
Tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) is a tick-transmitted flavivirus, which can infect humans and animals, sometimes even with a fatal outcome. Since many decades, TBEV is endemic in southern Germany, while only sporadic occurrence has been noted in northern parts of the country so far. Nevertheless, autochthonous human clinical cases are increasing in the federal state of Lower Saxony in north-western Germany, and several natural foci of TBEV transmission have recently been detected in this federal state. In order to shed more light on the current distribution of TBEV in Lower Saxony, the present study examined blood samples from wild and domestic animals for antibodies against TBEV. Overall, samples from 4,085 animals were tested by ELISA, including wild boar (N = 1,208), roe deer (N = 149), red deer (N = 61), fallow deer (N = 18), red foxes (N = 9), nutria (N = 9), raccoon dogs (N = 3), raccoons (N = 3), badgers (N = 1), European pine martens (N = 1), horses (N = 574), sheep (N = 266), goats (N = 67), dogs (N = 1,317) and cats (N = 399). Samples with an ELISA result of & GE;60 Vienna units (VIEU)/ml were subjected to confirmatory serum neutralization tests (SNT). In total, 343 of 4,085 (8.4%) animals tested positive for anti-TBEV-IgG by ELISA, of which 60 samples were confirmed by SNT. Samples of 89 animals showed a cytotoxic effect in the SNT and were excluded from seroprevalence calculation, resulting in an overall seroprevalence of 1.5% (60/3,996). Seroprevalence was higher among wild animals (wild boar: 2.9% [34/1,190], roe deer: 2.7% [4/149], red deer: 1.7% [1/60], fallow deer: 5.6% [1/18]) than among domestic animals (dogs: 1.1% [15/1,317], horses: 0.8% [4/505], sheep: 0.4% [1/266]). No anti-TBEV-antibodies were detected in the other wild animal species as well as goats and cats. A notable clustering of positive samples was observed in districts where TBEV transmission foci have been described. Further clusters in other districts suggest the existence of so far undetected transmission foci, underlining the fact that both wild and domestic animals are useful sentinels for monitoring the spread of TBEV.
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页数:9
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