| Literature DB >> 21605376 |
Aurélie Courcoul1, Lenny Hogerwerf, Don Klinkenberg, Mirjam Nielen, Elisabeta Vergu, François Beaudeau.
Abstract
Q fever is a worldwide zoonosis caused by the bacterium Coxiella burnetii. The control of this infection in cattle is crucial: infected ruminants can indeed encounter reproductive disorders and represent the most important source of human infection. In the field, vaccination is currently advised in infected herds but the comparative effectiveness of different vaccination protocols has never been explored: the duration of the vaccination programme and the category of animals to be vaccinated have to be determined. Our objective was to compare, by simulation, the effectiveness over 10 years of three different vaccination strategies in a recently infected dairy cattle herd.A stochastic individual-based epidemic model coupled with a model of herd demography was developed to simulate three temporal outputs (shedder prevalence, environmental bacterial load and number of abortions) and to calculate the extinction rate of the infection. For all strategies, the temporal outputs were predicted to strongly decrease with time at least in the first years of vaccination. However, vaccinating only three years was predicted inadequate to stabilize these dynamic outputs at a low level. Vaccination of both cows and heifers was predicted as being slightly more effective than vaccinating heifers only. Although the simulated extinction rate of the infection was high for both scenarios, the outputs decreased slower when only heifers were vaccinated.Our findings shed new light on vaccination effectiveness related to Q fever. Moreover, the model can be further modified for simulating and assessing various Q fever control strategies such as environmental and hygienic measures.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21605376 PMCID: PMC3125226 DOI: 10.1186/1297-9716-42-68
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Res ISSN: 0928-4249 Impact factor: 3.683
Figure 1Flow diagram describing the modelled spread of . The health states are the following: S, non-shedder apparently susceptible cow, I, shedder which still has the possibility to eliminate the bacterium and to become S again, I, shedder which no longer has the possibility to become S again, I, shedder which no longer has the possibility to become S again and sheds in milk in a persistent way, C, non-shedder but still infected individual and C, non-shedder which was Cin the past but eliminated the bacterium. The Vstates (SV, IV, IV, IV, CVand CV) are defined in the same way as S, I, I, I, Cand Crespectively, except that these animals have been vaccinated when susceptible and non pregnant and are then assumed "vaccinated in an effective way" (V). I and IVcows are in the subcategory m if they shed in milk only, mf if they shed in vaginal mucus/faeces only and mmf if they shed in milk and vaginal mucus/faeces. E represents the environmental bacterial load and p, the probability of infection or reinfection for non Vindividuals, is equal to . pis the probability of infection or reinfection for Vindividuals, which is a fraction of p. The other model parameters are presented in Additional file 1: Table S1. ε, ε, ε, εV, εVand εVare the quantities of bacteria shed during a time step by an individual I, I, I, IV, IVand IVrespectively and contaminating the environment. For a any shedder, ε represents the sum, for each shedding route, of the quantity of bacteria released, Qty, times ρ, its fraction reaching the herd environment.
Figure 2Temporal dynamics of the mean prevalence of shedders. (a), the mean environmental bacterial load (b) and the mean number of abortions (c) for the 4 vaccination scenarios. Scenario 1: vaccination of heifers and cows for a 10-year period (black line); scenario 2: vaccination of heifers and cows for a 3-year period with (scenario 2A - grey line) or without (scenario 2B - grey dotted line) loss of immunity one year after at the last vaccination; scenario 3: vaccination of heifers for a 10-year period (black dotted line); control: no vaccination (black thick line). Temporal dynamics of the mean prevalence of shedders (d) and mean environmental bacterial load (e) in scenario 1 with different values of p(transition rate from SVto IV).
Extinction rate and mean time to extinction for each of the vaccination scenarios
| Criteria | Scenario | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2A | 2B | 3 | |
| Extinction rate | 0.00 | 1 | 0.97 | 0.84 | 0.08 | 0.43 | 0.95 |
| Median time to extinction | - | week 272 | week 312 | week 390 | week 138 | week 276 | week 348 |
Control: no control programme; scenario 1: vaccination of heifers and cows for a 10-year period; scenario 2: vaccination of heifers and cows for a 3-year period with (scenario 2A) or without (scenario 2B) loss of immunity one year after the last vaccination; scenario 3: vaccination of heifers for a 10-year period
Figure 3Distribution of times to extinction of the 97 extinct trajectories of scenario 1.