| Literature DB >> 31618959 |
Héléna Ladreyt1,2, Benoit Durand3, Philippe Dussart4, Véronique Chevalier5,6,7.
Abstract
Despite the existence of human vaccines, Japanese encephalitis (JE) remains the leading cause of human encephalitis in Asia. Pigs are described as the main amplifying host, but their role in JE epidemiology needs to be reassessed in order to identify and implement efficient control strategies, for both human and animal health. We aimed to provide a systematic review of publications linked to JE in swine, in terms of both individual and population characteristics of JE virus (JEV) infection and circulation, as well as observed epidemiological patterns. We used the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) statement to select and analyze relevant articles from the Scopus database, 127 of which were included in the review. Pigs are central, but the implication of secondary hosts cannot be ruled out and should be further investigated. Although human vaccination cannot eradicate the virus, it is clearly the most important means of preventing human disease. However, a better understanding of the actual involvement of domestic pigs as well as other potential JEV hosts in different JEV epidemiological cycles and patterns could help to identify additional/complementary control measures, either by targeting pigs or not, and in some specific epidemiological contexts, contribute to reduce virus circulation and protect humans from JEV infection.Entities:
Keywords: Japanese encephalitis virus; control; epidemiology; pig
Year: 2019 PMID: 31618959 PMCID: PMC6832429 DOI: 10.3390/v11100949
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram representing the selection process.
Viraemia and active immune response in pigs after Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) experimental infection.
| Protocol | Viraemia | Immune Response | Reference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Test | Detection Period | Peak Value | Test | Antibody Detection | ||
| 5 sows, IV inoculation, Kanagawa strain, bled daily | ICISM | 1–4 dpi | NA | VN in mice | >7 dpi | [ |
| 4 piglets, SC inoculation, M5/596 and pig9 strains, bled daily | ICISM | For 4 days | 2.6 log LD50/0.03 mL | HIA | 7–35 * dpi | [ |
| 2 piglets, SC inoculation, 9215 strain, bled daily | ICISM | 1–4 dpi | NA | HIA | All positive at 7 dpi | [ |
| 6 piglets, SC inoculation, Nakayama strain, bled daily | ICISM + RT-PCR | 2–5 dpi | NA | SNT | All positive at 14 dpi | [ |
| 12 piglets, IV + ID inoculation, Nakayama strain, bled daily | RT-PCR | 1–5 dpi | 10^4 U/mL ** | SNT | 3–11 * dpi | [ |
| 10 piglets, IV inoculation, JE-91 strain, bled daily | RT-PCR | 3–5 dpi | 10^3.5 U/mL ** | SNT | All positive at 28 dpi | [ |
IV—intravenous; SC—subcutaneous; ID—intradermal; LD50—50% lethal dose; TCID50—50% tissue culture infective dose; ICISM—intracerebral inoculation of suckling mice; RT-PCR—reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction; VN—virus neutralization; HIA—hemagglutination inhibition assay; SNT—seroneutralization test; dpi—day post-infection; *All piglets positive at the date when monitoring ended; ** One U was defined as the viral RNA quantity corresponding to 1 TCID50 of the virus preparation used as the standard by the authors; NA: non-applicable, when viraemia detection was qualitative.
Sow reproductive disorders after experimental JEV infection and clinical signs and lesions after experimental JEV infection of piglets.
| Method | Clinical Signs | Macroscopic Lesions | Microscopic Lesions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 pregnant sows, IV inoculation, Fuji strain, bled daily until farrow | No | / | / | [ |
| 6 pregnant sows, IV inoculation, Kanagawa strain, bled daily until farrow | Mummified and hydrocephalic fetuses in 2/6 litters | / | / | [ |
| 14 piglets, IV inoculation, clinical signs monitoring and histopathology after euthanasia | Fever until 4 dpi, depression and hind limbs tremor | No | Non-suppurative encephalitis with perivascular cuffing of mononuclear cells and multifocal gliosis in grey and white matter cerebrum | [ |
| 10 piglets, intranasal inoculation, clinical signs monitoring and histopathology after euthanasia | Fever until 4 dpi, depression and slight hind limbs tremor on 4 piglets until 10 dpi maximum | No | Non-suppurative encephalitis with perivascular cuffing of lymphocytes, multifocal gliosis, neuronal degeneration, and necrosis | [ |
| 12 piglets, IV and ID inoculation, clinical signs monitoring, histopathology after euthanasia and RT-PCR on tissues | Fever until 5 dpi, reduce appetite, less manure, and reluctance to move until 6 to 9 dpi | No | Signs of viral meningoencephalomyelitis | [ |
| 10 piglets, IV inoculation, clinical signs monitoring, histopathology after euthanasia and RT-PCR on tissues | Fever until 5 dpi, mild depression and lethargy until 5 dpi, mild ataxia between 10 and 13 dpi, 2 pigs with hind limb ataxia between 19 and 27 dpi | No | No | [ |
IV—intravenous; ID—intradermal; dpi—day post-infection; RT-PCR—reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction; /—not investigated.
Detection of JEV in pig herds with reproductive failure and quantification of reproductive disorders.
| Lab Method | Material | Result | Differential Diagnosis Intention | Reproductive Failure | Country | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RT-PCR | Aborted fetuses | Detection | No | No quantitative data | China | [ |
| RT-PCR | Sample of 37 CSF of aborted piglets | 5/37 | No | No quantitative data | China | [ |
| ICISM, virus isolation, RT-PCR | Sample of 108 brain tissues of stillborn piglets | 20/108 | No | No quantitative data | China | [ |
| RT-PCR | Sample of 3 brain samples of stillborn piglets | 3/3 | CSFV, PRRSV, PRV, PPV not detected | 30 sows with RF/200 sows (15%) | China | [ |
| RT-PCR | 31 brain samples of stillborn piglets (all stillborn piglets of the farm) | 7/31 | No | 10 sows with RF/28 sows (36%), 2–5 sb/sow, 31 sb in total | India | [ |
| RT-PCR | Sample of 8 brain samples of stillborn piglets | 8/8 | CSFV, PRRSV, PRV, PPV not detected | 37 sows with RF/128 sows (29%) | China | [ |
| HIA on body fluids and virus isolation (unspecified method) | Aborted fetuses | Isolation on “some” fetuses | No | 50 sows with RF/320 sows (3 farms) (16%) | Japan | [ |
RT-PCR—reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction; ICISM—intracerebral inoculation of suckling mice; HIA—hemagglutination inhibition assay; CSF—cerebrospinal fluid; CSFV—classical swine fever virus; PRRSV—porcine respiratory syndrome virus; PRV—pseudorabies virus; PPV—porcine parvovirus; sb—stillborn; RF—reproductive failure (abortion or at least one stillborn piglet in the litter).
Persistence of anti-JEV maternal antibodies in piglets under field conditions.
| Protocol | Test | Average Age of Waning of Anti-JEV Maternal Antibodies | Country | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 80 piglets, 2–7 months old, from farms, bled monthly | HIA | >4 months old | Japan | [ |
| 9 piglets, in mosquito traps, bled monthly | HIA | >1.5 months old | Japan | [ |
| 2 cohorts of 15 piglets, 2 months old, bled every 10 days for 4 months | IgG ELISA | >3 months old | Cambodia, peri-urban | [ |
| 2 cohorts of 15 piglets, 2 months old, bled every 10 days for 4 months | IgG ELISA | Peri-urban: >2 months oldRural: >3.5 months old | Cambodia, peri-urban and rural | [ |
| 5 piglets, 2 months old, bled every month for 3 years | HIA | >2 months old | South India | [ |
HIA—hemagglutination inhibition assay; ELISA—Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay.
Experimental evidence of JEV direct transmission between piglets.
| Infection Route | Test for Viraemia and Oro-Nasal Fluids | Clinical Signs | Viraemia | Oro-Nasal Shedding | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Contact with infected pigs in vector-free buildings | RT-PCR | Yes | Yes, 3–10 dac | Yes, 5–10 dac | [ |
| Oro-nasal inoculation | RT-PCR | Yes | Yes, 1–9 dpi | Yes, 3–9 dpi | [ |
| Intranasal inoculation | / | Yes | / | / | [ |
dpi—day post-infection; dac—day after contact; RT-PCR—reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction; /—not investigated.
Figure 2JEV detection in swine from 1966 to 2016, based on selected studies.
Detection and seroprevalence of JEV in swine in the world.
| Sampling Region | Sampling Year | Origin of Sampled Animals (A/F if Pigs) | Age of Sampled Animals | Tested Animals | Serological Test | Anti-JEV Antibodies Evidence | Confirmation Test and Result | Reference | Older References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia (T.) | 1995 | F | NS | 90 | HIA | 63/90 | SNT + | [ | |
| Australia (T.) | 1998 | Feral pigs | NS | 113 | HIA | 90/113 | nd | [ | |
| Cambodia | 2007 | A and F | ~4.3 m (20 d–12 m) | 505 | HIA and IgG ELISA | 65.7% and 63.5% | nd | [ | [ |
| Hong Kong | 1968 | F | NS | 558 | HIA | 60,4% | nd | [ | |
| India | 2014 | F | >3 m | 51 | IgG ELISA | 35/51 | RT-PCR + | [ | [ |
| Indonesia | 2015 | F | NS | 80 | IgG ELISA | 32/80 | nd | [ | [ |
| Japan (M.) | 2008 | Wild boars | NS | 36 | SNT | 30/36 | SNT + | [ | [ |
| Japan (Is.) | 2010 | F | NS | 128 | HIA | 3.1% | RT-PCR - | [ | [ |
| Japan (Ir.) | 2010 | Wild boars | NS | 117 | HIA | 44.4% | RT-PCR - | [ | [ |
| South-Korea | 2011 | Wild boars | NS | 288 | SNT | 66% | SNT + | [ | |
| Laos | 2009 | A | 4–12 m | 727 | HIA | 74.7% | nd | [ | |
| Malaysia | 2016 | F | NS | 90 | IgG ELISA | 40/90 | nd | [ | [ |
| Myanmar | 1999 | F | NS | 36 | HIA | 12/36 | nd | [ | |
| Nepal | 2010 | F | 4–48 m | 454 | IgG ELISA | 16.7% | nd | [ | [ |
| Singapore | 1999 | Wild boars | NS | 28 | HIA | 28/28 | SNT + | [ | |
| Sri Lanka | 1988 | F | 1–24 m | 951 | SNT | 32.6% | SNT + | [ | |
| Thailand | 1983 | A | 4–12 m | 100 | HIA | 74% | ICISM + | [ | [ |
| China (Tibet) | 2015 | A | 1–6 m | 102 | IgM ELISA | nr | RT-PCR + | [ | [ |
| Vietnam | 2010 | A | 4–8 m | 641 | IgG ELISA | 60.4% | SNT + | [ | [ |
| Taiwan | 1966 | F | 3–8 m | 6000 | HIA | 37.3% | nd | [ |
d—days; m—months; T.—Torres strait, Australia; M.—Main; Is.—Ishigaki; Ir.—Iriomote (Japanese islands); A—abattoir; F—farm; NS—not specified; nr—not relevant as authors looked for IgM; nd—not done. * more recent longitudinal studies—no measured JEV seroprevalence but JEV confirmed by RT-PCR; ** JEV confirmed by either RT-PCR, ICISM, or SNT.
Detected seasonality in JEV infection in pigs.
| Country/Region | Sampling Protocol (Longitudinal or Cross-Sectional (Abattoir or Farm)) | Detected Seasonality in Pig Infection | Corresponding Climate | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cambodia | Longitudinal1 | All year | Not relevant ** | [ |
| North Vietnam | Abattoir 2 | February–October * | Summer/rainy season | [ |
| January–October * | [ | |||
| South Vietnam | Farms 1 | All year | Not relevant ** | [ |
| Laos | Abattoir 1 | June–July * | Summer/rainy season | [ |
| August * | [ | |||
| Malaysia | Abattoir 2,3 | November–January * | Summer/rainy season | [ |
| Indonesia | Longitudinal 2,4 | October–March * | Summer/rainy season | [ |
| Thailand | ||||
| Bangkok | Longitudinal 2,1 | February–May* | Hot and dry season | [ |
| Chiang Mai | Longitudinal 2,3 | May–July | Hot/rainy season | [ |
| Taiwan | Longitudinal 2,4 | March–October, peak in August/July* | Summer monsoon | [ |
| Japan, main Island | Abattoir 1,5 | July–November, peak in August/September | Summer (rainfall) to fall (typhoons) | [ |
| Abattoir 2 | June–December | [ | ||
| Abattoir 2,4 | July–August | [ | ||
| Abattoir 2 | May-March, peak in August | [ | ||
| Japan, Okinawa | Abattoir 2 | August | Tropical climate | [ |
| Abattoir 2,4 | April–October | |||
| North East India | Longitudinal 2 | June–August | Monsoon | [ |
| Sri Lanka | ||||
| Dry zone | Longitudinal 3 | October–November | Hot/rainy season | [ |
| Wet zone | March–April | |||
| North Australia | Longitudinal 2,3 | February–April | Hot/rainy season | [ |
* Period of highest detected circulation, but circulation all year around; 1ELISA; 2HIA; 3SNT; 4ICISM; ** Not relevant because there is no seasonality.