| Literature DB >> 24896257 |
Huanbin Liang1, Jidang Chen1, Jiexiong Xie1, Long Sun1, Fangxiao Ji1, Shuyi He1, Yun Zheng1, Chumin Liang1, Guihong Zhang1, Shuo Su1, Shoujun Li1.
Abstract
Infection by Hepatitis E virus (HEV), as a zoonotic disease virus, is well studied in pigs in China, but few studies in pets have been performed. This study was designed to characterize the prevalence of HEV infection among pet dogs and cats in major metropolitan areas of China. We conducted a seroepidemiological survey from 2012 to 2013 in 5 developed cities, Beijing, Shanghai, Canton, Shenzhen and Macao, by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The overall HEV seroprevalence in 658 dog and 191 cat serum samples was 21.12% and 6.28%, respectively. The analysis in dogs suggested that there were significant differences among cities, and the positive rate of HEV-specific antibody in all cities ranged from 6.06% (Shenzhen) to 29.34% (Beijing). Older pet cats have a high risk (OR, 10.25) for HEV seropositivity, but no strong relationship was observed between different genders and age groups. Additionally, it was revealed that stray dogs, omnivorous pet dogs and pet cats who share food, such as kitchen residue, with the general population would have a higher risk for HEV seropositivity. The odds ratios for these groups are 2.40, 2.83 and 5.39, respectively, compared with pet dogs and cats fed on commercial food. In this study, we first report that HEV is prevalent in pet dogs and cats in several large cities in China. Swill and kitchen residue may be a potential risk for HEV transmission from human to pets. As the sample size was relatively small in this study and may not be fully representative of China, further investigation is required to confirm the conclusions.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24896257 PMCID: PMC4045666 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0098068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Prevalence of Anti-HEV in dog serum samples collected from five developed cities in China.
| City | No. of serum samples | No. of positive serum samples | Analysis | ||
| positive rate(%) | OR(95%CI) | P value | |||
| Shenzhen | 99 | 6 | 6.06 | ref | |
| Macao | 63 | 9 | 14.29 | 2.58(0.87–7.66) | >0.05 |
| Canton | 134 | 25 | 18.66 | 3.56(1.40–9.04) | <0.01* |
| Shanghai | 120 | 28 | 23.33 | 4.72(1.87–11.93) | <0.01* |
| Beijing | 242 | 71 | 29.34 | 6.44(2.69–15.38) | <0.01* |
Six hundred and fifty-eight dog serum samples were collected from 37 pet hospitals since 2012. OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; ref, reference; *, statistically significant.
Anti-HEV in pet dogs in several developed cities of China according to different age groups, genders and food sources.
| Developed cities of China | Total | ||||||||
| Shenzhen | Macao | Canton | Shanghai | Beijing | |||||
| Positive rate%(Positive/Total) | % (positive/total) | OR (95% CI) | X2 | P value | |||||
| Age(year) | |||||||||
| ≤1 | 0.00%(0/39) | 0.00%(0/3) | 30.43%(7/23) | 15.00%(3/20) | 30.23%(26/86) | 21.05%(36/171) | ref | ||
| 2–5 | 8.33%(3/36) | 0.00%(0/15) | 17.50%(7/40) | 21.43%(9/42) | 34.88%(30/86) | 22.37%(49/219) | 1.08(0.66–1.76) | 0.10 | >0.05 |
| 6–10 | 5.00%(1/20) | 7.70%(2/26) | 20.45%(9/44) | 26.32%(10/38) | 22.92%(11/48) | 18.75%(33/176) | 0.87(0.51–1.47) | 0.29 | >0.05 |
| ≥10 | 50.00%(2/4) | 36.84%(7/19) | 7.41%(2/27) | 30.00%(6/20) | 18.18%(4/22) | 22.83%(21/92) | 1.11(0.60–2.04) | 0.11 | >0.05 |
| Gender | |||||||||
| Female | 5.56%(3/54) | 7.41%(2/27) | 16.13%(10/62) | 18.75%(9/48) | 21.57%(22/102) | 15.70%(46/293) | ref | ||
| Male | 6.67%(3/45) | 19.44%(7/36) | 20.83%(15/72) | 26.39%(19/72) | 35.00%(49/140) | 25.48%(93/365) | 1.84(1.24–2.72) | 9.33 | <0.01* |
| Food | |||||||||
| Dog food | 5.06%(4/79) | 5.89%(3/51) | 16.47%(14/85) | NA | NA | 9.77(21/215) | ref | ||
| Omnivory | 10.00%(2/20) | 50.00%(6/12) | 22.45%(11/49) | NA | NA | 23.46(19/81) | 2.83(1.43–5.61) | 9.43 | <0.01* |
OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; *, statistically significant; X2, Chi-Square Test; ref, reference; NA, not analyzed; Dog food, commercially available and not fresh meat.
Figure 1Prevalence of HEV among pet dogs in different cities according to gender and food.
1.1 Anti-HEV of dog serum for different genders; 1.2 Anti-HEV of dog serum for different eating habits. Statistical analyses performed in Fig. 1.1 and 1.2 separately divide by gender and food source for each city were indicated on the figure with an asterisk (*); *, statistically significant and P value <0.01.
Seroprevalence of dog HEV infection in Beijing and Canton.
| Subject | Univariate analysis | ||||
| Positive/Total(n) | Positive rate(%) | OR(95% CI) | X2 | P value | |
| Urban and inner suburban area of Beijing | |||||
| Beijing city | 6/21 | 28.57 | ref | ||
| Chaoyang | 18/57 | 31.58 | 1.15(0.38–3.47) | 0.07 | >0.05 |
| Chongwen | 4/17 | 23.53 | 0.77(0.18–3.34) | NA | >0.05 |
| Dongcheng | 7/19 | 36.84 | 1.46(0.39–5.51) | 0.31 | >0.05 |
| Fengtai | 7/21 | 33.33 | 1.25(0.34–4.64) | 0.11 | >0.05 |
| Haidian | 15/48 | 31.25 | 1.14(0.37–3.51) | 0.05 | >0.05 |
| Shijingshan | 5/19 | 26.32 | 0.89(0.22–3.60) | 0.03 | >0.05 |
| Xicheng | 3/17 | 17.65 | 0.54(0.11–2.57) | NA | >0.05 |
| Xuanwu | 6/23 | 26.09 | 0.88(0.23–3.33) | 0.03 | >0.05 |
| Canton | |||||
| Pet dogs | 25/134 | 20.20 | ref | ||
| Stray dogs | 22/62 | 35.48 | 2.40(1.45–4.18) | 6.58 | <0.05* |
OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; *, statistically significant; X2, Chi-Square Test; NA, Fisher's exact test with no value; ref, reference.
Prevalence of antibody against HEV among pet cats by demographics.
| Subject | Univariate analysis | ||||
| Positive/Total(n) | Positive rate(%) | OR(95% CI) | X2 | P value | |
| Age(year) | |||||
| ≤1 | 1/42 | 2.38% | ref | ||
| 2–5 | 2/70 | 2.86% | 1.21(0.11–13.73) | NA | ≈1 |
| 6–10 | 2/44 | 4.55% | 1.95(0.17–22.38) | NA | ≈1 |
| >10 | 7/35 | 20.00% | 10.25(1.19–88.01) | NA | <0.05* |
| Gender | |||||
| Male | 7/126 | 5.56% | ref | ||
| Female | 5/65 | 7.69% | 1.42(0.43–4.65) | 0.33 | >0.05 |
| Food | |||||
| Cat food | 6/157 | 3.82% | ref | ||
| Omnivory | 6/34 | 17.65% | 5.39(1.62–17.93) | 9.07 | <0.01** |
One hundred and ninety-one pet cat serum samples were selected mainly from Canton and Shenzhen since 2012.
OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; **, significantly different; *, different; X2, Chi-Square Test; NA, Fisher's exact test with no value; ref, reference; Cat food, commercially available and not fresh meat.