| Literature DB >> 18544152 |
Alexandre Fediaevsky1, Sue C Tongue, Maria Nöremark, Didier Calavas, Giuseppe Ru, Petter Hopp.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The development of active surveillance programmes for transmissible spongiform encephalopathies of small ruminants across Europe has led to the recent identification of a previously undetected form of ovine prion disease, 'atypical' scrapie. Knowledge of the epidemiology of this disease is still limited, as is whether it represents a risk for animal and/or public health. The detection of atypical scrapie has been related to the use of only some of the EU agreed rapid tests. Information about the rapid tests used is not, as yet, available from public reports on the surveillance of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies in small ruminants. We collected detailed results of active surveillance from European countries to estimate and to compare the prevalence of atypical scrapie and classical scrapie in sheep for each country stratified by each surveillance stream; healthy slaughtered and found dead adult sheep.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18544152 PMCID: PMC2442063 DOI: 10.1186/1746-6148-4-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Tests used in sheep TSE active surveillance between 2001 and 2006.
| A | 50 | BC, BE, CY, EE, FI, FR, GB, IS, IT, LT, NI, NL, NO, PT, SE | 15 | |
| B | Prionics Check Western test | 23 | CZ, DK, FI, FR, GB, IT, NL, SL | 8 |
| C | Enfer-test | 9 | BC, DK, FR, IE, IT, LT, NI | 7 |
| D | Prionics-Check LIA test | 5 | BC, CY, CZ, FR, IT | 5 |
| E | Enfer TSE Kit version 2.0 | 5 | CZ, FR, IE, LT, SL | 5 |
| F | 3 | DK, FR | 2 | |
| G | 2 | CH, IS, NO | 3 | |
| H | 1 | CH, CZ, NL | 3 | |
| I | Other (Histopathology and/or Immunohistochemistry; | 10 | CH, CY, CZ, FR, IS, IE, LT, NI, NL, NO | 12 |
Tests associated with the detection of AS case(s) are in bold, tests recommended by EFSA are underlined.
Figure 1Quantity of samples examined by tests A, F and G. In red, five countries processed more than 50,000 tests. In orange, one country processed between 20,000 to 50,000 tests. In yellow, four countries processed 5,000 to 20,000 tests. In pale yellow, five countries, performed less than 5,000 tests. In blue, four countries did not perform any of these tests. In grey, 11 countries did not answer the questionnaire (including Malta).
Figure 2Cases detected in sheep in active surveillance. In red, four countries detected AS only. In strip red and yellow, ten countries detected AS and CS. In yellow, three countries detected CS only. In yellow with black spots, one country detected TSE unclassified case. In green, two countries didn't detect any case. In grey, 11 countries did not answer the questionnaire (including Malta). The period covered ranges from 2002 to 2006. AS cases may have been detected by other means than through active surveillance.
Figure 3Reported AS cases by test. Percentage (number in brackets) of AS cases detected in sheep through active surveillance in 20 EU countries between 2002 and 2006 per test or combination of tests.
Figure 4Sheep CSPE (‰) in healthy slaughter surveillance. Crude prevalence estimates are represented with their 95% confidence intervals. The dashed line represents the mean CSPE in healthy slaughter for all the countries and all the years. Graph is restricted to country-years with more than 500 tests because confidence intervals were too large to fit on the graph with an appropriate scale. For 2006, some countries could not provide data for the full year. In Switzerland, surveillance was conducted from July 2004 to June 2005 and was referred to as a single year (2004).
Figure 7Sheep TSEs prevalence (‰) in active surveillance in Cyprus. Crude prevalence estimates are presented with their 95% confidence intervals.
Figure 6Sheep CSPE (‰) in fallen stock surveillance in Slovenia. Crude prevalence estimates are presented with their 95% confidence intervals.
Figure 8Sheep ASPE (‰) in healthy slaughter surveillance. Crude prevalence estimates are represented with their 95% confidence intervals. The dashed line represents the mean ASPE in healthy slaughter for all the countries and all the years included in ASPE calculation. Graph is restricted to country-years with more than 500 tests A or G because confidence intervals were too large to fit on the graph with an appropriate scale. For 2006, some countries could not provide data for the full year. In Switzerland, surveillance was conducted from July 2004 to June 2005 and was referred to as a single year (2004).
Figure 9Sheep ASPE (‰), in fallen stock surveillance. Crude prevalence estimates are represented with their 95% confidence intervals. The dashed line represents the mean ASPE in fallen stock for all the countries and all the years included in ASPE calculation. Graph is restricted to country-years with more than 500 tests A or G because confidence intervals were too large to fit on the graph with an appropriate scale.) For 2006, some countries could not provide data for the full year. In Switzerland, surveillance was conducted from July 2004 to June 2005 and was referred to as a single year (2004).
Variability of AS and CS detection with surveillance stream (reference is healthy slaughter) and year of surveillance.
| Atypical | Finland (Fisher test) | Surveillance stream | 0.0321 | ||
| Norway | Surveillance stream | < 1.10-5 | 4.27 | [2.33, 7.83] | |
| Portugal | Surveillance stream | 0.0088 | 1.64 | [1.13, 2.37] | |
| Switzerland | Surveillance stream | 0.0142 | 9.38 | [1.57, 56.15] | |
| Classical | France | Surveillance stream | < 1.10-5 | 8.01 | [6.15, 10.44] |
| Year of surveillance (linear) | < 1.10-5 | 0.61 | [0.58, 0.64] | ||
| Great Britain | Surveillance stream | < 1.10-5 | 5.04 | [3.61, 7.03] | |
| Year of surveillance (2003 vs 2002) | 0.0022 | 0.53 | [0.36, 0.80] | ||
| Year of surveillance (2004 vs 2002) | 0.0325 | 0.54 | [0.31, 0.95] | ||
| Year of surveillance (2005 vs 2002) | 0.0488 | 0.61 | [0.37, 1.00] | ||
| Year of surveillance (2006 vs 2002) | < 1.10-5 | 0.25 | [0.15, 0.39] | ||
| Iceland | Surveillance stream | < 1.10-5 | 304.40 | [50.44, 1 836.84] | |
| Ireland | Surveillance stream | < 1.10-5 | 29.19 | [17.05, 49.97] | |
| Year of surveillance (linear) | 0.8895 | 0.99 | [0.80, 1.21] | ||
| Interaction between surveillance stream and year of surveillance (linear) | 0.0337 | 0.78 | [0.61, 0.98] | ||
| Italy | Surveillance stream | < 1.10-5 | 5.68 | [4.00, 8.05] | |
| Year of surveillance (2003 vs 2002) | 0.0013 | 0.44 | [0.26, 0.72] | ||
| Year of surveillance (2004 vs 2002) | 0.0001 | 0.26 | [0.13, 0.50] | ||
| Year of surveillance (2005 vs 2002) | 0.0002 | 0.35 | [0.20, 0.61] | ||
| Year of surveillance (2006 vs 2002) | 0.0006 | 0.45 | [0.29, 0.71] | ||
| Slovenia (Fisher test) | Surveillance stream | 0.0037 | |||
| The Netherlands | Surveillance stream | 0.0017 | 1.53 | [1.17, 1.99] | |
| TSE positive | Cyprus | Surveillance stream | 0.2022 | 0.27 | [0.04, 2.00] |
| Year of surveillance (2004 vs 2003) | 0.0719 | 0.15 | [0.02, 1.18] | ||
| Year of surveillance (2005 vs 2003) | 0.0052 | 0.05 | [0.01, 0.42] | ||
| Year of surveillance (2006 vs 2003) | 0.0123 | 0.07 | [0.01, 0.57] | ||
| Interaction between surveillance stream and year of surveillance (2004 vs 2003) | 0.0635 | 7.13 | [0.90, 56.75] | ||
| Interaction between surveillance stream and year of surveillance (2005 vs 2003) | 0.0027 | 24.70 | [3.05, 200.18] | ||
Non-statistically significant results were not displayed.
Comparison of detection of AS and CS in active surveillance in fallen stock and in healthy slaughter. OR is defined as chances to detect AS versus chances to detect CS.
| France | Healthy slaughter | 68.63 | 1 | < 1.10-5 | 3.96 | [2.80,5.62] |
| Fallen stock | 7.83 | 1 | 0.005 | 0.69 | [0.54,0.89] | |
| Great Britain | Healthy slaughter | 9.30 | 1 | 0.002 | 1.55 | [1.17,2.05] |
| Fallen stock | 22.03 | 1 | < 1.10-5 | 0.37 | [0.24,0.57] | |
| Italy | Fallen stock | 21.60 | 1 | < 1.10-5 | 0.16 | [0.07,0.38] |
| Norway | Healthy slaughter | 19.17 | 1 | 1.10-5 | 45.00 | [2.73,741.78,] |
| Fallen stock | 14.71 | 1 | 0.0001 | 13.66 | [2.60,71.71] | |
| Portugal | Healthy slaughter | 107.38 | 1 | < 1.10-5 | 367.66 | [10.22,13 231.94] |
| Fallen stock | 35.44 | 1 | < 1.10-5 | 127.67 | [3.51,4 637.69] | |
| Sweden | Fallen stock | 5.56 | 1 | 0.02 | 21.00 | [0.88,500.93] |
Non-statistically significant results were not displayed.
Probability to detect zero case of AS depending on the sensitivity of the test (in column) and the number of tests (in row) for Estonia and Lithuania.
| 0.5 | 0.7 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 1 | |
| 1933 (Estonia) | 0.53 | 0.41 | 0.36 | 0.32 | 0.30 |
| 4092 (Lithuania) | 0.26 | 0.15 | 0.12 | 0.09 | 0.07 |
Figure 10Age distribution of AS and CS cases according to stream of surveillance (in %).
Figure 11Genotype distribution of AS and CS cases. Figure for 414 AS cases and 844 CS cases detected through active surveillance in fallen stock or healthy slaughter.
Number and frequency (%) of allele carriers among 1258 AS and CS cases detected between 2002 and 2006 in healthy slaughter and fallen stock in 18 EU countries.
| ARR | 132 (32.3) | 48 (9.5) | 65 (28.4) | 19 (2.3) |
| ARQ | 170 (41.6) | 220 (43.7) | 98 (42.8) | 456 (56.3) |
| VRQ | 3 (0.7) | 196 (39.0) | 2 (0.9) | 285 (35.2) |
| ARH | 5 (1.2) | 24 (4.8) | 6 (2.6) | 38 (4.7) |
| AHQ | 99 (24.2) | 15 (3.0) | 58 (25.3) | 12 (1.5) |
List of acknowledge people and affiliated institutions
| Department of Animal Production and Health, Basque Institute for Agricultural Research and Development (NEIKER) |
| Joseba M. Garrido, Marivi Geijo, Nieves Gomez, Leyre Benedicto, David Garcia-Crespo, Ana Hurtado, Ramon A. Juste |
| Veterinary and Agrochemical Research Centre (CODA/CERVA) |
| Stefan Roels |
| Veterinary Services |
| Giorgos Neophytou, Penelope Stylianou, Polyvios Neocleous, Soteria Georgiadou |
| NRL for Diagnosis of BSE and Animal TSEs, State Veterinary Institute Jihlava |
| Pavel Bartak, Pavel Vodrazka, Zbynek Semerad – State veterinary administration |
| Danish Veterinary and Food Administration |
| Søren Bach Rasmussen, Thomas Lysgaard, Peter Lind, National Veterinary Institute, Tecnical University of Denmark |
| Veterinary and Food Board |
| Ago Pärtel, Maarja Kristian |
| Finnish Food Safety Authority Evira |
| Maria Hautaniemi |
| AFSSA Lyon |
| Didier Calavas, Eric Morignat, Geraldine Cazeau, Alexandre Fediaevsky |
| Veterinary Laboratories Agency |
| Jo Nash, Judi Ryan, Julia Colvin, Mohamad Kossaibati, Danny Matthews, Sue Tongue |
| Institute for Experimental Pathology |
| Stefania Thorgeirsdottir, Sigurdur Sigurdarson |
| Department of Agriculture and Food |
| John Mullen |
| National Reference Centre for Trasmissible Spongiform Encephalopaty (CEA) – Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale del Piemonte, Liguria e Valle d'Aosta |
| Giuseppe Ru, Maria Cristina Bona, Pierluigi Acutis |
| National Veterinary Laboratory |
| Gediminas Pridotkas |
| Department of Agriculture and Rural Development |
| Valerie Allen |
| National Veterinary Institute |
| Petter Hopp |
| Direcção Geral de Veterinária |
| Agrela Pinheiro, Maria José Marques Pinto, Vanessa Luz |
| Ministry of agriculture, food and forestry – Veterinary administration of republic of Slovenia (VARS); |
| University of Ljubljana, Veterinary Faculty, National Veterinary Institute |
| Vida Cadonic Špelic, Ivan Ambrožic, Polona Juntes |
| SVA, National Veterinary Institute |
| Maria Nöremark |
| Federal Veterinary Office |
| Dagmar Heim, Heinzpeter Schwermer |
| Central Institute for Animal Disease Control |
| Fred van Zijderveld |