| Literature DB >> 25417556 |
Kenton L Morgan, Ian G Handel, Vincent N Tanya, Saidou M Hamman, Charles Nfon, Ingrid E Bergman, Viviana Malirat, Karl J Sorensen, Barend M de C Bronsvoort.
Abstract
Herdsman-reported disease prevalence is widely used in veterinary epidemiologic studies, especially for diseases with visible external lesions; however, the accuracy of such reports is rarely validated. Thus, we used latent class analysis in a Bayesian framework to compare sensitivity and specificity of herdsman reporting with virus neutralization testing and use of 3 nonstructural protein ELISAs for estimates of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) prevalence on the Adamawa plateau of Cameroon in 2000. Herdsman-reported estimates in this FMD-endemic area were comparable to those obtained from serologic testing. To harness to this cost-effective resource of monitoring emerging infectious diseases, we suggest that estimates of the sensitivity and specificity of herdsmen reporting should be done in parallel with serologic surveys of other animal diseases.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25417556 PMCID: PMC4257810 DOI: 10.3201/eid2012.140931
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Prevalence of FMD among cattle, Adamawa plateau, Cameroon, according to different surveillance methods, 2000*
| Administrative division | Previous 2 years, % (95% CI)†
| Previous 1 year, % (95% CI)†
| |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Herdsmen’s reports | VN testing | Herdsmen’s reports | I-ELISA | CHEKIT-ELISA | C-ELISA | ||
| Vina | 89.6 (83.0–96.1) | 85.1 (76.4–93.8) | 76.6 (66.4–86.8) | 74.5 (64.9–84.0) | 29.8 (16.3–43.2) | 70.2 (58.6–81.8) | |
| Mbere | 72.0 (55.0–89.0) | 76.0 (57.0–95.0) | 54.4 (32.6–76.1) | 50.8 (33.0–68.8) | 15.8 (1.8–29.7) | 56.1 (32.6–79.7) | |
| Djerem | 54.8 (34.7–74.9) | 59.2 (48.0–70.6) | 35.7 (19.1–52.3) | 55.4 (45.0–65.7) | 16.1 (1.7–30.4) | 37.5 (24.1–50.9) | |
| Mayo Banyo | 78.6 (66.0–91.2) | 85.7 (76.2–95.2) | 43.9 (22.5–65.4) | 59.1 (39.4–78.8) | 12.1 (0.7–23.5) | 63.6 (44.5–82.8) | |
| Faro and Deo | 100 | 100 | 73.3 (62.2–84.5) | 73.3 (52.4–94.3) | 40.0 (28.8–51.2) | 73.3 (52.4–94.2) | |
| Overall | 78.2 (72.1–84.3) | 80.3 (75.0–85.6) | 57.4 (49.8–65.1) | 63.0 (56.2–69.9) | 21.8 (15.6–28.0) | 60.4 (52.6–68.2) | |
*FMD, foot-and-mouth disease; VN, virus neutralization. †CIs adjusted for stratification by administrative division and clustering of herds by veterinary center.
No–gold standard estimation of herd-level sensitivity and specificity of herdsman reporting of FMD in administrative divisions of the Adamawa plateau, Cameroon*
| Administrative division | Sensitivity, % (95% PCI) | Specificity, % (95% PCI) |
|---|---|---|
| Vina | 94.3 (84.2–99.4) | 70.6 (44.6–91.3) |
| Mbere | 77.2 (50.7–96.5) | 69.3 (42.0–91.0) |
| Djerem | 57.8 (29.0–84.6) | 73.1 (51.4–90.3) |
| Mayo Banyo | 76.3 (52.8–95.0) | 92.0 (72.8–99.8) |
| Faro and Deo | 69.1 (42.9–90.4) | 33.1 (5.2–71.4) |
| Overall | 84.0 (75.1–92.2) | 74.6 (62.7–85.1) |
*FMD, foot-and-mouth disease; PCI, posterior credibility interval.