| Literature DB >> 30018199 |
Hossein Bannazadeh Baghi1,2,3, Farbod Alinezhad4,5, Ivan Kuzmin6, Charles E Rupprecht7.
Abstract
Rabies is a neglected but preventable viral zoonosis that poses a substantial threat to public health. In this regard, a global program has been initiated for the elimination of human rabies caused by rabid dogs through the mass vaccination of canine populations. Geographic areas vary greatly towards attainment of this objective. For example, while dog-mediated and wildlife rabies have been largely controlled in major parts of the Americas and Western Europe, the Middle East still grapples with human rabies transmitted by unvaccinated dogs and cats. Rabies prevention and control in the Middle East is quite difficult because the region is transcontinental, encompassing portions of Africa, Asia, and Europe, while consisting of politically, culturally, and economically diverse countries that are often subject to war and unrest. Consequently, one over-riding dilemma is the misinformation or complete lack of rabies surveillance data from this area. This communication is an attempt to provide an overview of rabies in the Middle East, as a cohesive approach for the honing of disease management in each area, based on data compiled from multiple sources. In addition, the related regional transboundary movement of rabies was investigated through phylogenetic studies of available viral gene sequences. Thereafter, the epidemiological status of rabies was assessed for the region. Finally, localities were classified first by the Stepwise Approach towards Rabies Elimination framework and then categorized into four different groups based on management theme: "rabies free"; owned dog and domestic animal vaccination; community dog vaccination; and wildlife vaccination. The classification system proposed herein may serve as a baseline for future efforts. This is especially important due to the severe lack of rabies information available for the Middle East as a whole and a need for a comprehensive program focusing on the entirety of the region in light of renewed international commitment towards canine rabies elimination.Entities:
Keywords: Middle East; canine vaccination; dog; lyssavirus; neglected disease; prophylaxis; rabies; surveillance; zoonosis
Year: 2018 PMID: 30018199 PMCID: PMC6165288 DOI: 10.3390/vetsci5030067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Sci ISSN: 2306-7381
Rabies virus gene sequences used in this study.
| Origin | Year | Genbank # | ID | Species | Details/Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Afghanistan | 2004 | EU086211 | 04029AFG | dog | Bourhy et al., 2008 |
| Afghanistan | 2009 | KP723582 | 20516 | dog | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Dubai | 2013 | KP723584 | 30440 | fox | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Egypt | 1979 | U22627 | na | human | Kissi et al., 1995 |
| Egypt | 1998 | DQ837461 | na | dog | David et al., 2009 |
| Egypt | 1998 | DQ837462 | na | dog | David et al., 2009 |
| Georgia | 1989 | AY352515 | RV305 | dog | Kuzmin et al., 2004 |
| Georgia | 2014 | KP723589 | 160 | na | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Iran | 2000 | AY854581 | V686 | cow | Nadin-Davis et al., 2003 |
| Iran | 2000 | DQ521212 | na | sheep | Nadin-Davis et al., Direct submission |
| Iran | 1991 | KP723593 | 13158 | wolf | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Iran | 1991 | KP723594 | 13159 | wolf | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Iran | 1991 | KP723597 | 13164 | hyena | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Iran | 1986 | U22482 | 8681IRA | dog | Kissi et al., 1995 |
| Iran | 1993 | U43016 | 9308IRA | jackal | Bourhy et al., 1999 |
| Iran | 1993 | U43018 | 9320IRA | wolf | Bourhy et al., 1999 |
| Iraq | 2011 | JX5241177 | RV2517 | dog | Horton et al., 2013 |
| Iraq | 2004 | KP723598 | 20276 | dog | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Iraq | 2007 | KP723603 | 20286 | dog | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Iraq | 2008 | KP723606 | 20291 | dog | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Iraq | 2009 | KP723610 | 20297 | dog | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Israel | 2004 | DQ837385 | na | fox | David et al., 2009 |
| Israel | 2000 | DQ837412 | na | fox | David et al., 2009 |
| Israel | 1998 | DQ837411 | na | fox | David et al., 2009 |
| Israel | 1998 | DQ837448 | na | dog | David et al., 2009 |
| Israel | 1993 | U43022 | 9332ISR | jackal | Bourhy et al., 1999 |
| Jordan | 1999 | DQ837423 | donkey/J2/1999 | donkey | David et al., 2009 |
| Jordan | 1998 | DQ837425 | cow/J4/1998 | cow | David et al., 2009 |
| Jordan | 1998 | DQ837427 | badger/J6/1998 | badger | David et al., 2009 |
| Oman | 1991 | KP723614 | 13145 | na | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Oman | 2002 | KP723617 | RVI | Fox | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Oman | 2002 | KP723618 | RVII | fox | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Oman | 2004 | KP723625 | RVXI | camel | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Pakistan | 1979 | KP723626 | 13088 | dog | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Pakistan | 1989 | KP723628 | RV195 | dog | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Saudi Arabia | 1990 | KP723630 | 13044 | fox | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Syria | 2010 | JF508180 | na | wolf | Johnson et al., direct submission |
| Turkey | 2001 | AY091610 | RV1124 | fox | Johnson et al., 2003 |
| Turkey | 2001 | AY091619 | RV1133 | dog | Johnson et al., 2003 |
| Turkey | 2003 | AY536254 | RV1385 | jackal | Johnson et al., 2006 |
| Turkey | 2003 | AY536258 | RV1389 | fox | Johnson et al., 2006 |
| Turkey | 2001 | AY538776 | RV1142 | dog | Johnson et al., 2006 |
| Turkey | 2000 | DQ837476 | T3 | dog | David et al., 2009 |
| Turkey | 2001 | KP723631 | RV1138 | dog | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Turkey | 2000 | KP723633 | RV1145 | fox | Horton et al., 2015 |
| Turkey | 2003 | KP723634 | RV1382 | dog | Horton et al., 2015 |
| UAE (Emirates) | 1991 | KP723635 | RVXII | camel | Horton et al., 2015 |
| UAE (Emirates) | 1994 | KP723637 | RVXIV | dog | Horton et al., 2015 |
na = data not available.
Figure 1Neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree of sequences (Table 1) included in the present study. Significant bootstrap values (over 70) are shown for the key nodes, and branch lengths are drawn to scale.
Comparison of generalized rabies status within the Middle East.
| Region | Human Rabies | Compulsory vaccination of domestic animals | Main Vectors | Reservoirs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| “Free” | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
| “Free” | Yes | n/a | n/a | |
| Endemic | No, but vaccination is available | Community dogs and cats | Community dogs | |
| Endemic | No, but available | Domestic dogs and wolves | Community dogs | |
| Endemic | Yes | Community dogs | Community dogs | |
| Low-Incidence | Yes | n/a | Foxes, jackals | |
| Low-Incidence | Yes | Community dogs | Community dogs and jackals | |
| “Free” | Yes | n/a | n/a | |
| Low-Incidence | No, but vaccination is available | Dogs | Community dogs | |
| Low-Incidence | No | Cats | Foxes | |
| Low-Incidence | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
| Free | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
| Low-Incidence | Yes | Community dogs and cats | Community dogs | |
| Endemic | No | Community dogs | Community dogs | |
| Endemic | No, but vaccination is available | Dogs | Foxes and community dogs | |
| “Free” | Yes | n/a | n/a | |
| Endemic | No | Dogs | Community dogs and wildlife (unknown) |
Key: —Group 1 “Rabies-Free” —Group 2 Domestic Dog Vaccination. —Group 3 Community Dog Vaccination. —Group 4 Wildlife Vaccination.
Figure 2Countries classified into four different rabies groups based on available data.
Figure 3Middle Eastern ranges of bat taxa known as lyssavirus reservoirs in other geographic locations. (A) Myotis mystacinus; (B) Myotis blythii; (C) Myotis nattereri; (D) Myotis daubentonii; (E) Eidolon helvum; (F) Miniopterus schreibersii; (G) Eptesicus serotinus; (H) Rousettus aegyptiacus. Compiled from data represented at the web site of IUCN Red List of Threatened Species (http://www.iucnredlist.org).