| Literature DB >> 31727129 |
Anna Omazic1, Helena Bylund2, Sofia Boqvist3, Ann Högberg4, Christer Björkman2, Morten Tryland5, Birgitta Evengård6, Anders Koch7,8,9, Camilla Berggren10, Alexander Malogolovkin11,12, Denis Kolbasov11, Nataly Pavelko11, Tomas Thierfelder10, Ann Albihn4,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: General knowledge on climate change effects and adaptation strategies has increased significantly in recent years. However, there is still a substantial information gap regarding the influence of climate change on infectious diseases and how these diseases should be identified. From a One Health perspective, zoonotic infections are of particular concern. The climate in Northern regions is changing faster than the global average. This study sought to identify climate-sensitive infectious diseases (CSIs) of relevance for humans and/or animals living in Northern regions. Inclusion criteria for CSIs were constructed using expert assessments. Based on these principles, 37 potential CSIs relevant for Northern regions were identified. A systematic literature search was performed in three databases using an explicit stepwise approach to determine whether the literature supports selection of these 37 potential CSIs.Entities:
Keywords: Ecosystem; Literature search; One health; Transmission; Vector-borne diseases; Zoonoses
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31727129 PMCID: PMC6854619 DOI: 10.1186/s13028-019-0490-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Vet Scand ISSN: 0044-605X Impact factor: 1.695
Fig. 1Flowchart of the literature search process. Flowchart of the literature search process used, which was as described in Moher et al. [11], with minor modifications
Data extracted from abstracts
| Variable | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Publication year | |
| Exclusion of an abstract and reason for omission at this stage | Not mentioning one of the selected potential CSIs; not studying animals or humans (only environment) |
| Characterisation of CSI | The abstract supports that Abiotic: Presence, spread, prevalence or persistence of the CSI is dependent on the ambient temperature, humidity, vegetation cover, surface water or other climate variable Ecosystem: Climate-driven changes in ecosystems or habitats are a driver in the epidemiology of the CSI Vectors and reservoirs: Spread or persistence is dependent on arthropod vectors, intermediate hosts and/or reservoir animals, which in turn are dependent on temperature or other climate variables for their geographical distribution, population density, persistence etc. Opportunistic: Individuals under stress due to environmental and climate conditions are more easily infected with the CSI The infection was classified as climate-sensitive |
| Geographical area | Country and/or continent |
| Focus on human and/or animal | |
| CSI in focus | |
| Category of CSI | Transmission routes Arthropod vector-borne; Food, feed and water-borne; Soil and natural water-borne; Contact transmission; Wildlife as intermediate host, vector, amplifier or reservoir |
Instructions given to readers of abstracts on how to extract relevant information about selected potential CSIs
Selected potential CSIs distributed into different categories based on mode of transmission
| Category | CSI/infectious agent | Zoonotic | No. of abstracts | No. of abstracts that included ≥ 2 CSIs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arthropod vector-borne | Ticks | Anaplasmosis | Yes | 10 | 17 |
| Babesiosis | Yes | 9 | 9 | ||
| Borreliosis/lyme disease | Yes | 42 | 23 | ||
| Tick-borne encephalitis | Yes | 33 | 16 | ||
| Midges | Blue tongue disease | No | 66 | 13 | |
| Schmallenberg virus | No | 3 | 3 | ||
| Mosquitoes | No | 3 | 0 | ||
| Sindbis fever/Pogosta/Ockelbo | Yes | 2 | 63 | ||
| Tularaemia | Yes | 10 | 6 | ||
| West Nile Fever | Yes | 100 | 17 | ||
| Food-, feed- and water-borne | Botulism | Yes | 4 | 1 | |
| Campylobacter infection | Yes | 4 | 18 | ||
| Cryptosporidiosis | Yes | 7 | 22 | ||
| Leptospirosis | Yes | 100 | 6 | ||
| Listeriosis | Yes | 0 | 3 | ||
| Salmonellosis | Yes | 6 | 14 | ||
| Vtec/EHEC | Yes | 0 | 4 | ||
| Soil- and natural water-borne | Anthrax | Yes | 16 | 2 | |
| Clostridiosis | Yes | 2 | 2 | ||
| Yes | 0 | 0 | |||
| Giardiasis | Yes | 2 | 15 | ||
| Q-fever | Yes | 2 | 1 | ||
| No | 0 | 5 | |||
| Contact transmission | Alphaherpes virus | No | 0 | 0 | |
| Gammaherpes virus | No | 0 | 0 | ||
| Necrobacillosis | Yes | 0 | 0 | ||
| Parapoxvirus (orf) | Yes | 0 | 1 | ||
| Pasteurellosis | No | 1 | 0 | ||
| Pestivirus | No | 0 | 0 |
Selected potential CSIs, divided and subdivided into categories based on mode of transmission to new individuals (within or between species), number of abstracts per CSI and number of abstracts that included more than one CSI
Selected potential CSIs that have wildlife as intermediate host, vector, amplifier or reservoir
| Category | CSI/infectious agent | Zoonotic | No. of abstracts | No. of abstracts that included ≥ 2 CSIs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wildlife as intermediate host, vector, amplifier or reservoir | ||||
| Rodents | Hantavirus | Yes | 24 | 2 |
| Other mammals | Brucellosis | Yes | 3 | 6 |
| Echinococcosis | Yes | 11 | 2 | |
| Rabies | Yes | 9 | 5 | |
| Toxoplasmosis | Yes | 10 | 2 | |
| Trichinellosis | Yes | 1 | 1 | |
| Other animalsa | No | 1 | 0 | |
| Fasciolosis | Yes | 45 | 1 | |
Selected potential CSIs that have wildlife as intermediate host, vector, amplifier or reservoir, here divided into three subgroups: rodents, other mammals, and other animals including invertebrates, following by number of abstracts per CSI and number of abstracts that included more than one CSI
aOther animals including invertebrates
Fig. 2Numbers of abstracts identified. Number of abstracts identified for each year from 1997 to October 2017 (n = 1275), number of abstracts included in the qualitative synthesis (n = 660) and number of abstracts excluded when not relevant, e.g. discussing diagnostic methods and/or not studying animal or human infections and/or not studying animal or humans (only environment) (n = 615). The line shows the total number of abstracts from the additional search for each year 1997–2017 when the climate search strings were left out
Fig. 3Percentage of abstracts covering each category of climate-sensitive infections. a Percentage of evaluated abstracts covering each category of potential CSIs: Arthropod vector-borne; food, feed and water-borne; soil and natural water-borne; contact transmission; and CSIs in wildlife. Abstracts that mentioned CSIs from more than one category were placed in the combined group. b Percentage of evaluated abstracts from each of the three subgroups (ticks, midges and mosquitoes) in the arthropod vector-borne category. Abstracts that mentioned CSIs from more than one subgroup were placed in the combined group
Fig. 4Geographical distribution. Number of abstracts distributed by geographical area for each category of potential CSIs. The size of each circle corresponds relatively on a log-scale to the number of abstracts per geographical area; Europe n = 356, Africa n = 20, Asia n = 80, Australia n = 18, North America n = 127, South America N = 63, global n = 35, n/a n = 35. The contact transmission category had only one abstract and is not shown in the diagram