| Literature DB >> 26524478 |
Aisling A Murphy1, Alec J Redwood2, Michael A Jarvis1.
Abstract
Modern human activity fueled by economic development is profoundly altering our relationship with microorganisms. This altered interaction with microbes is believed to be the major driving force behind the increased rate of emerging infectious diseases from animals. The spate of recent infectious disease outbreaks, including Ebola virus disease and Middle East respiratory syndrome, emphasize the need for development of new innovative tools to manage these emerging diseases. Disseminating vaccines are one such novel approach to potentially interrupt animal to human (zoonotic) transmission of these pathogens.Entities:
Keywords: CMV; Disseminating; Ebola; cytomegalovirus; emerging infectious disease; epidemic; transmission; vaccine; wildlife; zoonosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26524478 PMCID: PMC4732410 DOI: 10.1586/14760584.2016.1106942
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Expert Rev Vaccines ISSN: 1476-0584 Impact factor: 5.217
A non-exclusive list of current emerging zoonotic diseases amenable to targeting with a self-disseminating vaccine strategy.
| Zoonosis | Pathogen | Incidence | Primary transmission/reservoir species | Vector | Vaccine | Protective target antigens | Global Annual Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ebola | Virus | Sporadic | Great apes and bats (?) | None | Yes (E*) | GP | High lethality and capacity for spread |
| Rabies | Virus | 55,000 deaths/year | Dogs and wildlife (bats, foxes, skunk and raccoons) | None | Yes | G | $583 million [ |
| Pandemic/epidemic influenza A | Virus | Sporadic/annual | Pigs and birds (domestic and wild) | None | Yes | HA/NA | $71–167 billion (US, epidemic) [ |
| MERS | Virus | Sporadic | Bats and dromedary camels | None | Yes (E) | S | Unknown, but potential for rapid spread and significant mortality |
| Cystic echinococcosis ( | Cestode (dog tapeworm) | Unknown | Dogs and sheep | None | Yes (E) | EG95 | $1.9 billion (Human-associated) |
| Cysticercosis | Cestode (pig tapeworm) | 2.5 million >50,000 deaths/year [ | Pigs | None | Yes (E) | TSOL18 | 50% of late-stage epilepsy attributable to neurocysticercosis in endemic areas [ |
| Leptospirosis | Bacteria | 500,000 cases/year 5–10% mortality [ | Multiple including rodents and dogs | None | Yes (E) | LigA, LigB | Unknown |
| Lassa fever | Virus | 300,000 cases/year 2% mortality [ | Rodents ( | None | Yes (E) | GPC | Unknown |
| Bovine TB | Bacteria | Variable, but increasing | Domestic cattle and wildlife (badgers) | None | Yes (human) | Unknown | $160 million (Livestock, UK) [ |
| Chagas disease | Protozoa | >10 million, 50–200,000 deaths/year | Dogs and wildlife | Triato-mine bugs | No | Unknown | $1.3 billion in lost wages/productivity in Brazil alone [ |
| Acute sleeping sickness | Protozoa | 50–70,000 cases/year–5% of total sleeping sickness disease | Livestock and wildlife | Tse fly | No | Unknown | $4.75 billion due to impact on herd health in sub-Saharan Africa [ |
| Chronic sleeping sickness ( | Protozoa | 95% of total sleeping sickness disease | Livestock and wildlife, but not clearly defined | Tse fly | No | Unknown | Unknown |
Data taken from Refs: [54–65].
*E = conventional experimental vaccine.