| Literature DB >> 29461515 |
Mark E J Woolhouse1, Liam Brierley1.
Abstract
RNA viruses are a major threat to human health. Here, based on extensive literature searches carried out over a period of 18 years, we provide a catalogue of all 214 known human-infective RNA virus species. We link these viruses to metadata for a number of traits that influence their epidemiology, including the date of the first report of human infection, transmissibility in human populations, transmission route(s) and host range. This database can be used in comparative studies of human-infective RNA viruses to identify the characteristics of viruses most likely to pose the greatest public health threat, both now and in the future.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29461515 PMCID: PMC5819479 DOI: 10.1038/sdata.2018.17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Figure 1Accumulation through time of species (purple line), genera (blue) and families (orange) of RNA viruses known to infect humans.
Numbers of RNA virus species that exhibit specified levels of transmissibility in human populations (fully defined in the main text).
| Level of transmissibility | No. species |
|---|---|
| 2 (not transmissible) | 123 |
| 3 (self-limiting outbreaks) | 31 |
| 4a (human virus, also zoonotic) | 34 |
| 4b (human virus, not zoonotic) | 26 |
Numbers of RNA virus species naturally infecting additional host categories. Note that many viruses infect more than one host category.
| Host category | No. species |
|---|---|
| Humans only | 26 |
| Non-human primates | 61 |
| Other mammals | 158 |
| Birds | 37 |
| Reptiles | 7 |
| Fish | 1 |
Numbers of RNA virus species with specified routes of transmission to humans. Note that many viruses are transmitted by more than one route.
| Transmission route | No. species |
|---|---|
| Vector-borne | 91 |
| Inhalation | 67 |
| Ingestion | 33 |
| Fomites | 19 |
| Sexual | 10 |
| Broken skin | 25 |
| Iatrogenic | 9 |
| Maternal | 28 |
| Close physical contact | 68 |