| Literature DB >> 31887151 |
Alison K Howell1, Catherine M McCann1, Francesca Wickstead2, Diana J L Williams1.
Abstract
The liver flukes, Fasciola hepatica and F. gigantica, are common trematode parasites of livestock. F. hepatica is known to modulate the immune response, including altering the response to co-infecting pathogens. Bovine tuberculosis (bTB), caused by Mycobacterium bovis, is a chronic disease which is difficult to control and is of both animal welfare and public health concern. Previous research has suggested that infection with liver fluke may affect the accuracy of the bTB skin test, but direction of the effect differs between studies. In a systematic review of the literature, all experimental and observational studies concerning co-infection with these two pathogens were sought. Data were extracted on the association between fluke infection and four measures of bTB diagnosis or pathology, namely, the bTB skin test, interferon γ test, lesion detection and culture/bacterial recovery. Of a large body of literature dating from 1950 to 2019, only thirteen studies met the inclusion criteria. These included studies of experimentally infected calves, case control studies on adult cows, cross sectional abattoir studies and a herd level study. All the studies had a medium or high risk of bias. The balance of evidence from the 13 studies included in the review suggests that liver fluke exposure was associated with either no effect or a decreased response to all of the four aspects of bTB diagnosis assessed: skin test, IFN γ, lesion detection and mycobacteria cultured or recovered. Most studies showed a small and/or non-significant effect so the clinical and practical importance of the observed effect is likely to be modest, although it could be more significant in particular groups of animals, such as dairy cattle.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31887151 PMCID: PMC6936813 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0226300
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Numbers of studies found and removed at each stage of the systematic review (PRISMA flow diagram).
A summary of the studies meeting the criteria for inclusion in the systematic review of bovine tuberculosis (bTB) and liver fluke.
| Study | Reported in | Sample size | Country | Type of study | bTB outcome measure | Fluke outcome measure | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Schanzel and Stolarik, 1962 [ | 10,711 | Czechoslovakia | Cross-sectional abattoir study with PM 1, general abattoir cattle population, single abattoir | Skin test (B) | Gross evidence of liver fluke infection (B) | 1. Fluke infected cattle less likely to have false negative bTB skin test (significant, |
| 2 | Meyer, 1963 [ | 320 | EastGermany | Cross-sectional abattoir study with PM 1, general abattoir cattle population, single abattoir | Skin test (B) | Gross evidence of liver fluke infection (B) | 1. No difference in the chance of false negative bTB skin test in fluke-infected compared to fluke-free cattle |
| 3 | Broughan et al., 2008; DEFRA, 2005 [ | 400 | UK | Case control study with 200 bTB reactors, 200 in contacts (partially matched but not from same farm). Beef and dairy cattle, PM3 | Culture-confirmed lesion (B) | Liver fluke antibodies (B) | Cattle with fluke antibodies less likely to have confirmed bTB in both SICCT positive and negative animals. Significant in dairy reactors only, |
| 4 | Flynn et al., 2007 [ | 18 | Ireland | Calves, experimentally infected with BCG and/or fluke. 4 groups: Fluke only, Fluke first then BCG 4 weeks later, BCG then fluke 4 weeks later, and BCG only. SICCT carried out 13w after BCG infection. PM3 after 23 weeks | SICCT (B) | Antibody ELISA (Q) | 1. Co-infected calves more likely to test negative on both Bovigam® test and SICCT than BCG only–in both the BCG first and the fluke first groups. |
| 5 | Flynn et al., 2009; Garza-Cuartero et al., 2016, unpublished (Jim McNair, personal communication) [ | 18 | Northern Ireland | Calves, experimentally infected in 3 groups: fluke only, fluke and | SICCT (B) | Antibody ELISA (B) | 1. Fluke only calves had higher fluke numbers than co-infected (non-significant) |
| 6 | Munyeme et al., 2012 [ | 1680 | Zambia | Cross sectional abattoir study with PM1 followed by culture. General abattoir cattle population across 13 abattoirs | Unclear: either lesion presence or culture-confirmed lesion presence (B) | Current infection (B) | Cattle infected with fluke were significantly more likely to have bTB lesions |
| 7 | Claridge, 2012 [ | 80 | UK | Case control. 40 matched pairs of lactating dairy cattle, 20 each of reactors and inconclusive reactors. | SICCT (B; positive either R or IR) | Antibody ELISA (Q) | No difference between groups in terms of fluke antibody levels, |
| 8 | Claridge et al., 2012 [ | 3026 herds | UK | Cross sectional dairy herd level study using bulk milk tank samples and herd bTB status. | Herd SICCT breakdown (B) | Antibody ELISA (Q; smoothed) | 1. Positive fluke test is significant negative predictor for bTB breakdown |
| 9 | Claridge et al., 2012a; Garza-Cuartero et al., 2016 [ | 12 | Northern Ireland | Calves, experimentally infected in 2 groups: | SICCT (Q) | Antibody ELISA (B) | 1. Co-infected had smaller response to SICCT (although no change to qualitative result i.e. all still reactors)(significant, |
| 10 | Byrne et al., 2017 and Byrne et al., 2018 [ | 6242/5698 | Northern Ireland | Cross sectional abattoir study with PM2, SICCT positive and SICCT negative in-contacts cattle only, single abattoir | SICCT reaction size (Q) | Current infection (B) | 1. No difference in bTB lesion presence between liver fluke and non liver fluke groups (current or previous fluke infection) |
| 11 | Kelly et al., 2018 [ | 732 | Cameroon | Cross sectional abattoir study with PM1, general slaughter population, single abattoir. Fulani and mixed breed cattle | Lesion presence (B) | Liver damage (B) | 1. Co-infected animals more likely to have bTB lesion [mixed breed] |
| 12 | Byrne et al., 2019a [ | 138,566 | Northern Ireland | Cross sectional abattoir study with PM 1/2 followed by culture. Single abattoir. Populations examined include all cattle slaughtered at abattoir, LRS, cNRs or reactors | SICCT (B; standard and severe analysed separately) | Active liver fluke infection and/or fluke damage (B) | 1. No association between liver fluke and SICCT result |
| 13 | Byrne et al., 2019b [ | 1494 herds | Northern Ireland | Dairy herd level study. Repeat bulk milk samples | Culture-confirmed herd breakdown (B) | Antibody ELISA (B and Q) | Possible small size effects but near universal liver fluke infection could have hidden the result |
Q indicates quantitative or ordinal measure. B indicates binary measure. D indicates description of differences
PM1: Routine post-mortem examination that is routinely carried out in the slaughterhouse for all cattle. PM2: Standard PM for reactors involves examination of more tissues than that done routinely, but is still carried out according to the usual protocols followed by abattoir staff. PM3: Detailed PM has been carried out by researchers and may include more in depth examination e.g. slicing and soaking the liver
A summary of where the outcomes from studies 5, 9 and 10 were published.
| Allocated study number | Aspect of study | Reported in |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | SICCT | Unpublished |
| Lesions | [ | |
| Bacterial recovery | [ | |
| IFN γ | [ | |
| 9 | SICCT | [ |
| Lesions | [ | |
| Bacterial recovery | [ | |
| IFN γ | [ | |
| 10 | Presence of visible lesions | [ |
| Tuberculin reaction size, post-mortem lesion counts, pathology | [ |
The confounders controlled for in each study included in the systematic review on liver fluke and bovine TB.
| Study | Age | Breed | Sex | Region | Others |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | no | no | no | no | |
| 2 | no | no | no | no | |
| 3 | yes | yes | no | yes | Flukicide treatment, herd size, season, test interval |
| 4 | NA | NA | NA | NA | |
| 5 | NA | NA | NA | NA | |
| 6 | no | no | no | yes | |
| 7 | no | no | no | no | |
| 8 | NA | NA | NA | no | Herd size, environmental/climate factors |
| 9 | NA | NA | NA | NA | |
| 10 | yes | yes | yes | yes | Herd of origin |
| 11 | yes | yes | yes | no | |
| 12 | yes | Herd type (dairy or non-dairy) | yes | yes | Herd size, year, environmental/climate factors |
| 13 | NA | NA | NA | yes | Herd size, bTB history in herd and locality, season |
Summary of bias for the included studies.
| Study number | Study design | Sampling bias | Random allocation | Blinding | Comparability of groups | Detection bias | Incomplete outcome data | Selective reporting |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | NA | |||||||
| 2 | NA | |||||||
| 3 | NA | |||||||
| 4 | NA | |||||||
| 5 | NA | |||||||
| 6 | NA | |||||||
| 7 | NA | |||||||
| 8 | NA | |||||||
| 9 | NA | |||||||
| 10 | NA | |||||||
| 11 | NA | |||||||
| 12 | NA | |||||||
| 13 | NA |
Red denotes a high risk of bias, yellow, medium, and green, a low risk of bias. NA (not applicable) refers to measures which do not apply to the study due to its design.
Fig 2A harvest plot showing the results from the thirteen studies included in the analysis.
The numbers correspond to study numbers given in Tables 1 and 3. Studies which cover more than one aspect are included more than once. Quality of evidence relates to the likelihood of bias and the clarity of reporting. The size of the box is an assessment of the likely clinical importance of the finding, if it were true. Small effect boxes include some results considered statistically significant. The number of stars was decided by allocating a value of 2 for best quality evidence, 1 for medium and 0.5 for poorest quality evidence, and multiplying this by 1 for a small box and 2 for a large box, then summing all the values within that section. Studies are shown on the border line if there was a difference in skin test reaction size but this did not affect binary skin test result.