Title of article :
Peste Des Petits Ruminants in Atypical Hosts and Wildlife: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of the Prevalence between 2001 and 2021
Author/Authors :
SowjanyaKumari, S Indian Council of Agricultural Research - National Institute of Veterinary Epidemiology and Disease Informatics (ICARNIVEDI) - Yelahanka - Bengaluru - Karnataka, India , Bhavya, A. P Indian Council of Agricultural Research - National Institute of Veterinary Epidemiology and Disease Informatics (ICARNIVEDI) - Yelahanka - Bengaluru - Karnataka, India , Akshata, N Indian Council of Agricultural Research - National Institute of Veterinary Epidemiology and Disease Informatics (ICARNIVEDI) - Yelahanka - Bengaluru - Karnataka, India , Kumar, K. V Indian Council of Agricultural Research - National Institute of Veterinary Epidemiology and Disease Informatics (ICARNIVEDI) - Yelahanka - Bengaluru - Karnataka, India , Bokade, P. P Indian Council of Agricultural Research - National Institute of Veterinary Epidemiology and Disease Informatics (ICARNIVEDI) - Yelahanka - Bengaluru - Karnataka, India , Suresh, K. P Indian Council of Agricultural Research - National Institute of Veterinary Epidemiology and Disease Informatics (ICARNIVEDI) - Yelahanka - Bengaluru - Karnataka, India , Shome, B. R Indian Council of Agricultural Research - National Institute of Veterinary Epidemiology and Disease Informatics (ICARNIVEDI) - Yelahanka - Bengaluru - Karnataka, India , Balamurugan, V Indian Council of Agricultural Research - National Institute of Veterinary Epidemiology and Disease Informatics (ICARNIVEDI) - Yelahanka - Bengaluru - Karnataka, India
Abstract :
Peste des petits ruminants (PPR) or goat plague is considered a leading, highly contagious, and most lethal
infectious viral disease of small ruminants affecting the worldwide livestock economy and international animal
trade. Although sheep and goats are the primarily affected, the PPR Virus (PPRV) host range has expanded to
other livestock (large ruminants) and wildlife animals over the last few decades, resulting in serious concern to
the ongoing PPR global eradication program, which is primarily optimized, designed, and targeted towards
accessible sheep and goat population. A systematic review and meta-analysis study was conducted to estimate
the prevalence and spill-over infection of PPRV in large ruminants (bovine and camel) and wildlife. Published
articles from 2001 to October 2021 on the "PPR" were searched in four electronic databases of PubMed,
Scopus, Science direct, and Google Scholars. The articles were then selected using inclusion criteria
(detection/prevalence of PPRV in bovine, camel, and wildlife population), exclusion criteria (only sheep or
goats, lack of prevalence data, experimental trial, test evaluation, and reviews written in other languages or
published before 2001), and the prevalence was estimated by random effect meta-analysis model. In the current
study, all published articles belonged to Africa and Asia. The overall pooled prevalence of PPR estimates was
24% (95% CI: 15-33), with 30% in Asia (95% CI: 14-49) and 20% in Africa (95% CI: 11-30). The overall
estimated pooled prevalence at an Africa-Asia level in bovine and camel was 13% (95% CI: 8-19), and in
wildlife, it was 52% (95% CI: 30-74) with significant heterogeneity (I2 = 97%) in most pooled estimates with a
high prevalence in atypical hosts and wildlife across Asia and Africa. Over the last two decades, the host range
has increased drastically in the wildlife population, even for prevalent PPR in the unnatural hosts only for a
short time, contributing to virus persistence in multi-host systems with an impact on PPR control and
eradication program. This observation on the epidemiology of the PPRV in unnatural hosts demands appropriate
intervention strategies, particularly at the livestock-wildlife interface.
Keywords :
Prevalence , Meta-analysis , PPR , Bovine , Camel , Wildlife , Systemic Review
Journal title :
Archives of Razi Institute