| Literature DB >> 29587849 |
Chloé Haas1, Francesco C Origgi1, Sophie Rossi2, Jorge R López-Olvera3, Luca Rossi4, Raquel Castillo-Contreras3, Anna Malmsten5, Anne-Marie Dalin5, Riccardo Orusa6, Serena Robetto6, Luciano Pignata7, Santiago Lavín3, Marie-Pierre Ryser-Degiorgis8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sarcoptic mange has recently emerged in wild boar in Switzerland, raising the question of the origin of the infection. The main aim of this study was to assess the extent of exposure of the wild boar populations to Sarcoptes scabiei in Switzerland, prior to and after the detection of mange cases, to determine whether the mite has been recently introduced into the populations concerned. We performed a serological survey using a commercially available ELISA and 1056 archived blood samples of free-ranging wild boar from Switzerland. To facilitate the interpretation of the obtained data, we additionally estimated seroprevalence in wild boar populations of four other European countries (1060 samples), both from areas with confirmed clinical cases of mange and from areas without reported cases in wild boar. Lastly, we revised the evaluation of the commercial ELISA when used with wild boar sera.Entities:
Keywords: ELISA; Europe; Sarcoptes scabiei; Sarcoptic mange; Serology; Seroprevalence; Switzerland; Wild boar
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29587849 PMCID: PMC5872548 DOI: 10.1186/s12917-018-1430-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Fig. 1Map of western and northern Europe depicting the study areas. Numbers from 1 to 10 represent study areas in France, Sweden, Italy and Spain as indicated in Table 1. The framed map shows a close-up of Switzerland with the six Swiss study areas in dark green and labelled with the abbreviations indicated in Table 1
Study areas and results of the serosurvey. The total number of tested wild boar samples (n), total number of seropositive animals (pos), estimated seroprevalences in percent (Prev) and 95% confidence interval (CI) are given for each study area for all samples (total) and for wild boar ≤2 years old (young age class), together with the p-values of the binomial test comparing the estimated prevalence of each study area with Uppland (baseline). P-values < 0.05 are highlighted in bold. Note that although seroprevalence was found to be higher in young than adult wild boar in general, the reverse was observed in Skåne (46 youngs, 22 adults) and Södermanland (3 youngs, 26 adults). Wild boar are free-ranging in all areas but two: The National Domain of Chambord is fenced with high walls, in this area wild boar are regularly fed by game wardens, and until 2014 medicated food containing ivermectin was spread on feeding grounds; La Mandria is also delimited by physical boundaries (although occasional outbound and inbound dispersal movements of wild boar are not excluded)
| Country | Study area | ID study area | Mange statusa | Total samples | Young age class only | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prev in % (pos/ | 95% CI | Prev in % (pos/ | 95% CI | p-value | |||||
| Switzerland | Geneva | GE | N | 2.6 (10 / 389) | 1.2–4.7 | 0.2955 | 3.3 (9 / 274) | 1.5–6.1 | 0.6096 |
| Midlands | SP | N | 0.1 (1/105) | 0.0–5.2 | 1.0000 | 1.3 (1 / 77) | 0.0–7.0 | 1.0000 | |
| Jura 1 | J1 | C | 12.7 (14 / 110) | 7.1–20.4 |
| 19.7 (14 / 71) | 11.2–30.9 |
| |
| Jura 2 | J2 | N | 3.4 (3 / 88) | 0.7–9.6 | 0.2696 | 4.9 (3 / 61) | 1.0–13.7 | 0.4964 | |
| Thurgau | TG | S | 1.3 (2 / 150) | 0.2–4.7 | 0.7586 | 1.7 (2 / 115) | 0.2–6.1 | 1.0000 | |
| Ticino | TI | C | 2.8 (6 / 213) | 1.0–6.0 | 0.2823 | 4.0 (5 / 124) | 1.3–9.2 | 0.5388 | |
| France | Vosgesb | 1 | C | 14.7 (28 / 191) | 10.0–20.5 |
| 15.0 (21 / 140) | 9.5–22.0 |
|
| Chambordc | 2 | S | 17.4 (8 / 46) | 7.8–31.4 |
| 21.1 (4 / 19) | 6.1–45.6 |
| |
| Sweden | Uppland | 3 | N | 0.0 (0 / 82) | 0.0–4.4 | – | 0.0 (0 / 33) | 0.0–10.6 | – |
| Södermanland | 4 | C | 10.3 (3 / 29) | 2.2–27.4 |
| 0.0 (0 / 3) | 0.0–70.8 | NA | |
| Skåne | 5 | C | 10.3 (7 / 68) | 4.2–20.1 |
| 8.7 (4 / 46) | 2.4–20.8 | 0.2231 | |
| Italy | Aostad | 6 | C | 9.4 (6 / 64) | 3.5–19.3 |
| 23.8 (5 / 21) | 8.2–47.2 |
|
| Vercellie | 7 | C | 6.3 (1 / 16) | 0.2–30.2 | 0.3598 | 8.3 (1 / 12) | 0.2–38.5 | 0.5936 | |
| La Mandriaf | 8 | N | 5.6 (10 / 179) | 2.7–10.0 | 0.0665 | 5.7 (7 / 122) | 2.3–11.5 | 0.3494 | |
| Imperiag | 9 | C | 6.2 (13 / 211) | 3.3–10.3 |
| 7.6 (10 / 132) | 3.7–13.5 | 0.2211 | |
| Spain | Barcelona | 10 | N | 1.2 (2 / 174) | 0.1–4.1 | 0.8306 | 1.5 (2 / 137) | 0.2–5.2 | 1.0000 |
aThree different mange status are considered: “non-reported” (N) in absence of known clinical cases, “confirmed” (C) if Sarcoptes scabiei was identified in skin samples from clinical cases, and “suspected” (S) if wild boar with suspicious skin lesions have occurred but the etiological role of S. scabiei was not confirmed (not investigated or not detected). In Thurgau, a few wild boar with focally extensive, well demarcated alopecia were documented by phototrapping but not submitted to veterinary examination. In the National Domain of Chambord, multiple wild boar with suspicious skin lesions were tested for mites in skin scraping material (light microscopy) or skin samples (histology, polymerase chain reaction) but S. scabiei was never found
bParc Naturel Régional des Vosges du Nord (Vosges Department)
cNational Domain of Chambord (Loir-et-Cher Department)
dAosta Valley Region
eVercelli Province (Piedmont Region)
fParco Regionale La Mandria (Piedmont Region)
gImperia (Liguria Region)
Model comparison. List of the generated models and their characteristics. Each table line corresponds to one model. Df = degree of freedom, logLik = Log-likelihood. Model selection was done according to the Akaike’s Information Criterion (AIC). Models are ordered according to the AIC, with the best model on the top
| Factora | df | logLik | AIC | Delta AIC | AIC weight | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Age | Mange status | |||||
| – | + | + | 6 | − 355.205718 | 722.411435 | 0 | 0.63956508 |
| + | + | + | 7 | −354.924564 | 723.849129 | 1.43769374 | 0.31166893 |
| – | + | – | 4 | − 360.163851 | 728.327702 | 5.91626678 | 0.03320349 |
| + | + | – | 5 | −359.926631 | 729.853263 | 7.44182739 | 0.01548504 |
| – | – | + | 4 | − 366.711672 | 741.423344 | 19.0119087 | 4.76E-05 |
| + | – | + | 5 | −366.397265 | 742.79453 | 20.3830952 | 2.40E-05 |
| – | – | – | 2 | − 371.194558 | 746.389117 | 23.9776816 | 3.97E-06 |
| + | – | – | 3 | − 370.926502 | 747.853004 | 25.4415691 | 1.91E-06 |
aFactor involvement: + stands for inclusion and – for exclusion
Parameters of the best model. Model parameters include the estimated logit coefficient (Estimate), the standard error of the coefficient (Std error), the z score (z-value) and the p-value of the Wald test (Pr(>|z|))
| Variable | Estimate | Std error | z-value | Pr(>|z|) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (adult versus juvenile) | −1.42905 | 0.36330 | −3.934 | 8.37e-05 *** |
| Age (subadult versus juvenile) | 0.02359 | 0.23062 | 0.102 | 0.918534 |
| Mange status (N vs. C) | −1.46035 | 0.41219 | −3.543 | 0.000396 *** |
Fig. 2Histogram of the apparent seroprevalences (in %) according to age classes. The young class (juveniles and subadults, ≤ 60 kg) is represented in deep blue and the adult class in light blue. The vertical dotted lines over the bars represent the upper limit of the corresponding 95% confidence intervals. Seroprevalence data are given for areas pooled according to their mange status (“confirmed cases”, i.e., Sarcoptes scabiei was identified in skin samples; and “no reported cases”). The two areas with suspected but unconfirmed cases were excluded from the graph (National Domain of Chambord in France: likely cases, high apparent seroprevalence, 8 seropositive samples; Thurgau in Switzerland: doubtful cases, low apparent seroprevalence, 2 seropositive samples)
Estimated seroprevalences in the two sampling periods in three study areas in Switzerland. Seroprevalences (Prev) are given in percent (%) with the number of positive samples (pos) and total number of samples (n) in parenthesis, the 95% confidence interval (CI) and the p-value of the binomial test applied to compare local seroprevalences with that of Uppland (baseline, see Table 1). This information is provided both for all samples and for the young age class (≤ 60 kg) only. P-values < 0.05 are highlighted in bold
| Study area | Mange statusa | Period | Total samples | Young age class only | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prev in % (pos/ | 95% CI | Prev in %, (pos/ | 95% CI | |||||
| Geneva | N | 1 | 3.6 (6/167) | 1.3–7.7 | 0.1944 | 4.6 (5/108) | 1.5–10.5 | 0.4710 |
| N | 2 | 1.8 (4/222) | 0.5–4.6 | 0.5115 | 2.4 (4/166) | 0.7–6.1 | 0.8245 | |
| Jura 1 | N | 1 | 18.2 (2/11) | 2.3–51.8 |
| 25.0 (2/8) | 3.2–65.1 |
|
| C | 2 | 12.1 (12/99) | 6.4–20.2 |
| 19.0 (12/63) | 10.2–30.9 |
| |
| Ticino | N | 1 | 5.3 (3/57) | 1.1–14.6 | 0.1318 | 8.3 (2/24) | 1.0–27.0 | 0.3375 |
| C | 2 | 1.9 (3/156) | 0.4–5.5 | 0.5141 | 3.0 (3/100) | 0.6–8.5 | 0.7411 | |
aN no reported clinical cases, C confirmed clinical cases (S. scabiei was identified in skin samples)