| Literature DB >> 30869000 |
R S Sikkema1, E A B A Farag2, Mazharul Islam3, Muzzamil Atta3, C B E M Reusken1, Mohd M Al-Hajri2, M P G Koopmans1.
Abstract
Dromedary camels have been shown to be the main reservoir for human Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) infections. This systematic review aims to compile and analyse all published data on MERS-coronavirus (CoV) in the global camel population to provide an overview of current knowledge on the distribution, spread and risk factors of infections in dromedary camels. We included original research articles containing laboratory evidence of MERS-CoV infections in dromedary camels in the field from 2013 to April 2018. In general, camels only show minor clinical signs of disease after being infected with MERS-CoV. Serological evidence of MERS-CoV in camels has been found in 20 countries, with molecular evidence for virus circulation in 13 countries. The seroprevalence of MERS-CoV antibodies increases with age in camels, while the prevalence of viral shedding as determined by MERS-CoV RNA detection in nasal swabs decreases. In several studies, camels that were sampled at animal markets or quarantine facilities were seropositive more often than camels at farms as well as imported camels vs. locally bred camels. Some studies show a relatively higher seroprevalence and viral detection during the cooler winter months. Knowledge of the animal reservoir of MERS-CoV is essential to develop intervention and control measures to prevent human infections.Entities:
Keywords: Animal pathogens; coronavirus; emerging infections; zoonoses
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30869000 PMCID: PMC6518605 DOI: 10.1017/S095026881800345X
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Fig. 1.Results literature search.
Summary table of included papers
| References | Study design | Country of origin | Year | MERS-CoV RNA presence | MERS-CoV seroprevalence | Sex | Age | Imported/local | Sampling location | Other animals tested |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hemida | Cross-sectional | KSA | 2010–2013 | ppNT: 90% (280/310) | <1Y: 72% (47/65) | Sheep 0% (0/100) | ||||
| Perera | Cross-sectional | Egypt | 2013 | MN: 98% (108/110) | Abattoir | Goat 0% (0/13) | ||||
| Reusken | Cross-sectional | Oman | 2013 | pMA: 100% (50/50) | Female: 100% (50/50) | 8–12Y: 100% (50/50) | Local | Breeding farm | Bactrian camel 0% (0/4) | |
| Reusken | Cross-sectional | Jordan | 2013 | Faecal: 0% (0/11) | pMA: 100% (11/11) | Male: 100% (11/11) | 3–14m: 100% (11/11) | Sheep: 0% PCR (0/126) pMA: 5% (6/126): 0% (0/126) | ||
| Alagaili | Cross-sectional | KSA | 1992 | ELISA: 100% (1/1) | <2Y: 52% (50/96) | Goat: PCR 0% (0/36) ELISA 0% (0/35) | ||||
| Alexandersen | Cross-sectional | UAE | 2005 | VNT/ELISA: 82% (9/11) | Male: 50% (2/4) | Sheep 0% (0/20) | ||||
| Azhar | Human outbreak investigation | KSA | 2013 | Nasal: 11% (1/9) | IFA/ELISA: 100% (9/9) | <1Y: PCR 33% (1/3) IFA/ELISA: 100% (3/3) | Farm | |||
| Chu | (Multiple) cross-sectional | Egypt | 2014 | Nasal: 4% (4/93) | ppNT: 92% (48/52) | >6Y: 92% (48/52) | Sudan or Ethiopia | Abattoir | ||
| Corman | Cross-sectional | Kenya | Total | ELISA, total: 30% (228/774) | Adult: 37% (226/70) | Total, farm: 9% (40/436) | ||||
| Haagmans | Human outbreak investigation | Qatar | 2013 | Nasal: 86% (12/14) | IFA/VNT: 100% (14/14) | Farm | ||||
| Hemida | Longitudinal | KSA | 2013–2014 | Nasal: 33% (9/27) | <2Y: 39% (7/18) | Farm | ||||
| Hemida | Cross-sectional | KSA | 1993 | ppNT: 90% (118/131) | Farm | |||||
| Meyer | Cross-sectional | UAE | 2003 | IFA: 100% (151/151) | >2Y: 100% (151/151) | Bactrian camel 0% (0/16) | ||||
| Muller | Cross-sectional | Somalia | 1983–1984 | ELISA: 84% (72/86) | Abattoir | |||||
| Nowotny | Cross-sectional | Oman | 2013 | Nasal: 7% (5/76) | ||||||
| Raj | Cross-sectional | Qatar | 2014 | Nasal: 2% (1/53) | ||||||
| Reusken | Cross-sectional | Qatar | 2013 | Nasal: 15% (5/33) | pMA: 100% (33/33) | Female: 15% (5/33) | >5Y: PCR 42% (5/12) ELISA 100% (12/12) | Farm | ||
| Reusken | Cross-sectional | Nigeria | 2010–2011 | pMA: 28% (100/358) | 4–15Y: 28% (100/358) | Abattoir also serves Chad, Niger, CAR | Abattoir | |||
| Woo | Cross-sectional | UAE | 2013 | Faecal: 5% (14/293) | WB: 98% (58/59) | <1Y: PCR 21% (13/61): 98% (54/55) | Farm | |||
| Al Hammadi | Human outbreak investigation | UAE | 2015 | Nasal: 100% (8/8) | ppNT: 100% (5/5) | Female: 100% (5/5) | <1Y: 100% (4/4) | Oman | Border screening | |
| Chu | Cross-sectional | Nigeria | 2015 | Nasal: 11% (14/132) | ppNT: 95% (125/131) | >6Y: 95% (125/131) | Abattoir | |||
| Crameri | Cross-sectional | Australia | 2013–2014 | VNT: 0% (0/307) | Abattoir: 231 | |||||
| Deem | Cross-sectional | Kenya | 2013 | pMA: 50% (166/335) | <6m: 36% (22/61) | Farm: 48% (124/261) | ||||
| Farag | Cross-sectional | Qatar | 2014 | Nasal: 60% (61/101) | pMA: 97% (100/103) | <1Y: PCR: 68% (50/73) | Abattoir | |||
| Gutierrez | Cross-sectional | Canary Islands | 2015 | ELISA: 4% (7/170) | Male: 0% (0/101) | ⩾2Y: 4% (7/170) | African: 41% (7/17) | Farm | ||
| Khalafalla | Longitudinal | KSA | 2013–2014 | Nasal: 29% (28/96) | <4Y: 42% (15/36) | Abattoir, live animal market, veterinary hospital | ||||
| Shirato | Cross-sectional | Japan | 2015 | Nasal: 0% (0/4) | ELISA: 0% (0/5) | Male: nasal PCR 0% (0/1) 0% (0/1) | <2Y: 0% (0/1) | Zoo | Bactrian camels: | |
| Wernery | Cross-sectional | UAE | 2015 | Nasal: 0% (0/254) | ELISA: 92% (234/254) | Female: ELISA 99% (132/133) | 0–3m: ELISA: 75% (24/32) | Farm | ||
| Wernery | Cross-sectional | UAE | 2015 | Nasal: 5% (45/871) | ELISA: 93% (786/843) | <1Y: PCR: 35% (24/68) ELISA 85% (92/108) | Farm | |||
| Yusof | Cross-sectional | UAE | 2014 | Nasal: 2% (126/7803) | KSA | Border screening: 2% (70/4617) | ||||
| Meyer | Longitudinal | UAE | 2014–2015 | At 6m (nasal): 18% (2/11) of calves, no dams | At day 0: MN/ELISA 0% (0/11) | Dams: ELISA: 100% (11/11) | Farm | |||
| Miguel | Cross-sectional | Kazakhstan | 2015 | ppNT: 0% (0/455) | Female: 0% (0/455) | Farm | Bactrian camels: | |||
| Muhairi | Human outbreak investigation | UAE | 2014 | Farms MERS patients ( | Farm | Sheep: 0% (0/34) | ||||
| Sabir | Cross-sectional | KSA | 2014–2015 | Nasal: 12% (159/1309) | ⩽6m:15% (28/190) | Local: 15% (133/893) | Abattoir: 0% (0/14) | |||
| Al Salihi | Cross-sectional | Iraq | 2015–2016 | 15% (15/100) | Male: 18% (3/17) | <1Y: 0% (0/9) | Farm: 16% (13/80) | |||
| Ali | Cross-sectional | Egypt | 2014–2016 | Nasal: 15% (435/2825) | MN: 71% (1808/2541) | Male: PCR 21% (300/1439) MN: 72% (905/1254) | <2Y: PCR 16% (97/591) MN 37% (221/596) | Local: PCR 12% (192/1658) MN 61% (1015/1655) | Market: PCR 2.5% (4/159) MN 92% (159/172) | |
| Ali | Cross-sectional | Egypt | 2014–2015 | Nasal: 4% (41/1078) | MN: 84% (871/1031) | Male: PCR 3% (21/798) MN 85% (651/765) | ⩽2Y: PCR 2% (2/82) MN 52% (42/81) | Local: PCR 1% (2/340) MN 76% (257/339) | Market: PCR 3% (9/290) MN 94% (273/289) | Cattle: PCR 0% (0/35) MN 0% (0/35) |
| Doremalen | Cross-sectional | Jordan | 2016 | Nasal: 67% (28/42) | ELISA 82% (37/45) | <1Y: PCR 61% (11/18) ELISA 78% (14/18) | Farm PCR 77% (17/22) ELISA 77% (17/22) | Cattle: ELISA 0% (0/5) | ||
| Falzarano | Cross-sectional | Mali | 2009–2010 | ELISA: 88% (502/571) | Male: 86% (210/245) Female: 92% | 1–2Y: 83% | Farm | Cattle and sheep: 0% (0/10) | ||
| Hemida | Longitudinal | KSA | 2014–2015 | Nasal: 4% (3/70) | ppNT: 100% (70/70) | ⩽2Y: 19% (3/16) | Farm | |||
| Kasem | Human outbreak investigation | KSA | 2014–2016 | Nasal: 10% (75/780) | ELISA: 71% (422/595) | Male: PCR 20% (49/245) ELISA 84% (127/152) | ⩽2Y: PCR 15% (46/298) ELISA 57% (145/251) | Farm | ||
| Miguel | Cross-sectional | Burkina Faso Ethiopia | 2015 | Nasal: 5% (27/525) | ppNT: 80% (421/525) | Seropositivity and CR-positive rate higher in females | Seropositivity rates increased, MERS RNA detection rate decreased with age | |||
| Munyua | Cross-sectional | Kenya | 2013 | ELISA 90% (789/877) | Male: 81% (173/213) | 1–4Y: 73% (209/285) | Farm: 71% (10/14) | |||
| Saqib | Cross-sectional | Pakistan | 2012–2015 | ELISA: 56% (315/565) | Male: ELISA/MN: 44% (96/217) | ⩽2Y: MN 29% (26/89) | ||||
| Yusof | Cross-sectional | UAE | 2015 | Nasal: 29% (109/376) | Male: 27% (73/269) | <1Y: 32% (81/255) | Local: 25% (53/210) Oman: 50% (53/106): 5% (3/60) | Market | ||
| David | Israel | 2012–2017 (serum) | Nasal: 0% (0/540) | VNT: 62% (254/411) | Male: PCR 0% (0/54) | Farm | Llama PCR 0% (0/19) | |||
| Chu | Cross-sectional | Ethiopia | 2016–2017 | Nasal: 5% (5/102) | ||||||
| Harrath | Cross-sectional | KSA | 2016 | ELISA: 84% (144/171) | Male: 83% (77/93) | <2Y: 93% (66/71) | Local | Farm | ||
| Islam | Cross-sectional | Bangladesh | 2015 | Nasal: 0% (0/55) | ELISA/ppNT: 31% (17/55) | Male: ppNT 34% (10/29) | <2Y: ELISA/ppNT 9% (1/11) | Local: ELISA/ppNT 4% (1/24) | Market: 63% (12/19) | Sheep: PCR 0% (0/18) ELISA/ppNT 0% (0/18) |
| Kasem | Cross-sectional | KSA | 2015–2017 | Nasal: 56% (394/698) | <2Y: 72% (303/423) >2Y: 33% (91/275) | Market: 42% (184/435) |
Camel population and density
| Country | Camel population (OIE, 2016) | Camel density (OIE, 2016) |
|---|---|---|
| Africa | ||
| Algeria | 354 565 (OIE, 2014) | 0.15 (OIE, 2014) |
| Burkino Faso | 19 097 | 0.07 |
| Djibouti | 50 000 | 2.17 |
| Egypt | 66 233 | 0.07 |
| Eritrea | 385 283 | 3.18 |
| Ethiopia | 1 200 000 | 1.06 |
| Kenya | 2 986 057 | 5.12 |
| Libya | 110 000 | 0.06 |
| Mali | 1 028 700 | 0.83 |
| Mauritania | 1 379 417 (OIE, 2013) | 1.34 (OIE, 2013) |
| Morocco | 197 550 (OIE, 2014) | 0.44 (OIE, 2014) |
| Niger | 1 698 110 (OIE, 2013) | 1.34 (OIE, 2013) |
| Nigeria | 279 397 | 0.3 |
| Sudan | 4 830 000 | 1.93 |
| Somalia | 7 100 000 | 11.13 |
| Chad | 6 400 000 | 4.98 |
| Tunisia | 56 021 | 0.34 |
| Middle East/Central Asia | ||
| Afghanistan | 175 270 | 0.21 |
| India | 400 000 (OIE, 2015) | 0.12 (OIE, 2015) |
| Iran | 171 500 | 0.10 |
| Iraq | 81 205 | 0.19 |
| Jordan | 10 872 (OIE, 2014) | 0.12 (OIE, 2014) |
| Kazakhstan | 170 513 | 0.06 |
| Kuwait | 80 790 | 4.53 |
| Oman | 257 713 | 1.21 |
| Pakistan | 1 000 000 | 1.24 |
| Qatar | 77 417 (OIE, 2014) | 6.77 (OIE, 2014) |
| Saudi Arabia | 481 138 | 0.25 |
| Syria | 45 610 | 0.25 |
| Turkmenistan | 122 900 | 0.25 |
| UAE | 392 667 | 4.74 |
| Uzbekistan | 14 800 | 0.03 |
| Yemen | 459 366 | 0.87 |
Excluding China and Mongolia because the large majority of camel population are Bactrian camels.
Camel population exists of both dromedary and Bactrian camels[66].
Fig. 2.Virological and serological evidence for MERS CoV in dromedary camels.
MERS-CoV in non-dromedary animals in the field
| Species | Seroprevalence | Viral RNA |
|---|---|---|
| Bactrian camel | 0% (0/505) (Netherlands, Chile [ | 0/390 (China [ |
| Alpaca | 24% (30/126) (Israel(+) [ | 0% (0/102) (Israel [ |
| Llama | 23% (6/26) (Israel (+) [ | 0% (0/19) (Israel [ |
| Guanaco | 0% (0/2) (Chile [ | – |
| Cattle and buffalos | 0% (0/258) (KSA [ | 0% (0/35) (Egypt [ |
| Swine | 0% (0/260) (Egypt [ | – |
| Sheep | 0.2% (1/482) | 0% (0/307) (Jordan [ |
| Goats | 0% (0/399) (KSA [ | 0% (0/72) (KSA [ |
| Horses, donkeys | 0% (0/22) (Egypt [ | 0% (0/19) (Egypt [ |
| Birds | 0% (0/444) (KSA [ | – |
| Bats | 0% (0/91) (Egypt [ |
MERS-CoV RNA in nasal swabs.
Articles that were not included in the original literature search, because no camels were investigated in these studies.
Six additional sera from sheep in Qatar tested positive by protein microarray (pMA), but could not be confirmed by NT.