| Literature DB >> 32054524 |
Bronwyn Orr1, Gemma Ma1, Wei Ling Koh1, Richard Malik2, Jacqui M Norris1, Mark E Westman1, Denise Wigney3, Graeme Brown1, Michael P Ward1, Jan Šlapeta4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Canine heartworm disease, caused by Dirofilaria immitis, has global veterinary importance. In Australia, the prevalence of canine heartworm infection decreased markedly following the introduction of over-the-counter macrocyclic lactones. We aimed to estimate the prevalence of canine heartworm infection in at-risk populations of dogs in eastern Australia and analyse published prevalence data from Australia.Entities:
Keywords: At-risk population; Australia; Canine; Dirofilaria immitis; Heartworm; Pig-hunting; Prevalence
Year: 2020 PMID: 32054524 PMCID: PMC7020351 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-020-3943-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1Pig-hunting dogs in Australia. Image courtesy of John Calvani
Fig. 2Dogs surveyed for the presence of Dirofilaria immitis antigen in Australia. a Geographical distribution of dogs tested for heartworm as part of 2016–2019 prevalence surveys. The size of the circle at each location in New South Wales and Queensland (Central and Northern) is proportional to the number of tested dogs, number in brackets indicates number of D. immitis antigen positive dogs / total number of tested dogs. b Violin plots of distribution of age of 566 dogs sampled as part of four distinct cohorts, mean and quartiles are show within the violins. On the far left of the figure is a scatter dot plot of the individual ages of 13 antigen-positive dogs
Summary of 566 dogs tested for Dirofilaria immitis antigen across eastern Australia 2016–2019
| Cohort | Locality | Agea | Positive/total | Canine heartworm prophylaxis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DiroChek® | Anigen Rapid® | ||||
| Queensland | |||||
| Cohort 1 | Northern | 3 (0.1–13) | 1b/42 | 1b/42 | None or intermittent |
| Central | 3 (0.1–9) | 12/62 | 11/62 | None or intermittent | |
| New South Wales | |||||
| Cohort 2 | Remote western | 1 (0.5–12) | 0/332 | nd | None |
| Cohort 3 | Goulburn | 9 (1–15) | 0/45 | nd | None |
| Cohort 4 | Greater Sydney | 5 (2–9) | nd | 0/85 | Rigorous in 54% (46/85) |
aMedian (minimum-maximum), in years
bA 9-year-old male relocated from Central Queensland
Abbreviations: nd, not determined; DiroChek®, DiroChek® Heartworm Antigen Test Kit (Zoetis, NJ); Anigen Rapid®, Rapid Test Kit Heartworm (CHW) Ag2.0 (Anigen, BioNote Inc., Seoul, South Korea)
Risk factors associated with the odds of Dirofilaria immitis antigen seropositivity of 104 pig-hunting dogs in North Queensland, Australia
| Variable | Category | Beta | SE | Odds ratio | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | ≤ 5 years | 0 | – | – | 1 | – |
| > 5 years | 1.331 | 0.642 | 0.038 | 3.786 | 1.076–13.326 | |
| Location | Inland | 0 | – | – | 1 | – |
| Coastal | 1.371 | 0.629 | 0.029 | 3.940 | 1.148–13.522 |
Abbreviations: SE, standard error; 95% CI, 95% confidence interval
Summary of molecular confirmation of Dirofilaria immitis using species specific qPCR
| Sample ID | DiroChek®a | Anigen Rapid®b | Estimated | Host (dog) Cq(GAPDH) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BO#231 | Positive | Positive | < 5 | 26.17 |
| BO#103 | Positive | Positive | < 5 | 24.54 |
| BO#135 | Positive | NDA | 503 | 23.76 |
| BO#102 | Positive | Positive | 537 | 25.38 |
| BO#55 | Positive | Positive | 6591 | 28.13 |
| BO#56 | Positive | Positive | 7665 | 27.13 |
| BO#138 | Positive | Positive | 22,050 | 24.34 |
| BO#134 | Positive | Positive | 0 | 23.81 |
| BO#136 | Positive | Positive | 0 | 24.71 |
| BO#168 | Positive | Positive | 0 | 26.61 |
| BO#58 | Positive | Positive | 0 | 27.23 |
aDiroChek® Heartworm Antigen Test Kit (Zoetis, NJ)
bAnigen Rapid® Test Kit Heartworm (CHW) Ag2.0 (Anigen, BioNote Inc., Seoul, South Korea)
Abbreviations: NDA, no detectable antigen; Mff, D. immitis microfilariae
Fig. 3Histogram of published studies on Dirofilaria immitis in Australia from 1901 to 2019. All articles were manually inspected to confirm the presence D. immitis data in Australia (red, n = 98) and studies reporting prevalence data of D. immitis were identified (blue, n = 32). Inclusion criteria for retained references included primary data on D. immitis prevalence in dogs, regardless of the method used
Summary of canine heartworm prevalence data in Australia from published studies between 1901–2019
| Location | Year(s) | Sample size | Sample source | Method of detection | Prevalence (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Queensland | ||||||
| Brisbane | 1959 | Unknown | Dogs | Necropsy | 10 (unspecified) | [ |
| Brisbane | 1964–1965 | 761 | RSPCA dogs | Necropsy and/or Mff | 24 (183/761; 95% CI: 21.1–27.2) | [ |
| Brisbane | 1968 | 114 | Pound dogs | Unknown | 17 (unspecified) | [ |
| Townsville | 1969 | 94 | Vet clinic dogs | Mff | 37 (35/94; 95% CI: 28.1–47.3) | [ |
| Brisbane | 296 | 21 (61/296; 95% CI: 16.4–25.6) | ||||
| Brisbane | 1969–1971 | 238 | Dogs | Mff | 15 (37/238; 95% CI: 11.5–20.7) | [ |
| Cherbourg | 16 | Dogs | 6 (1/16; 95% CI: < 0.1–30.3) | |||
| Edward River | 36 | Dogs | 85 (31/36; 95% CI: 70.9–94.4) | |||
| Aurukun | 23 | Dogs | 90 (20/23; 95% CI: 67.0–96.3) | |||
| Bamaga | 48 | Dogs | 25 (12/48; 95% CI: 14.8–38.9) | |||
| Hope Vale | 86 | Dogs | 0 (0/86; 95% CI: 0–5.1) | |||
| Mornington Island | 14 | Dogs | 0 (0/14; 95% CI: 0–25.2) | |||
| Kowanyama | 84 | Dogs | Necropsy | 88 (78/84; 95% CI: 85.0–97.0) | [ | |
| Townsville | 1972 | 28 | Owned dogs | Mff | 68 (unspecified) | [ |
| Brisbane | 1972–1976 | 480 | Dogs | Mff | 36 (171/480; 95% CI: 31.5–40.0) | [ |
| Cherbourg | 80 | Dogs | 8 (6/80; 95% CI: 3.2–15.7) | |||
| Kowanyama | 45 | Dogs | 64 (29/45; 95% CI: 49.8–76.8) | |||
| Edward River | 23 | Dogs | 78 (18/23; 95% CI: 57.7–90.8) | |||
| Bamaga | 45 | Dogs | 71 (32/45; 95% CI: 56.5–82.4) | |||
| Brisbane | 1979 | 120 | Pound dogs | Mff | 36 (43/120; 95% CI: 27.8–44.7) | [ |
| Brisbane | 1981 | 100 | Stray puppies (> 8 weeks) | Mff | 1 (1/100; 95% CI: < 0.1–6.0) | [ |
| Brisbane | 1986 | 57 | Pound dogs | Necropsy | 60 (34/57; 95% CI: 46.7–71.4) | [ |
| Brisbane | 1986 | 59 | Pound dogs | Necropsy | 64 (35/59; 95% CI: 46.6–70.9) | [ |
| Brisbane | 1988 | 125 | Stray dogs | Necropsya | 42 (52/125; 95% CI: 33. 3–50.7) | [ |
| Brisbane | 1989 | 100 | Dogs | Necropsy | 22 (22/100; 95% CI: 14.9–31.1) | [ |
| Brisbane | 1991 | 272 | Pound dogs | Necropsy | 49 (134/272; 95% CI: 43.4–55.2) | [ |
| Brisbane | 1993 | 57 | Pound dogs | Necropsy | 60 (34/57; 95% CI: 46.7–71.4) | [ |
| Townsville | 2001 | Unknown | Pound dogs | Unknown | 15 (unspecified) | [ |
| 2002 | 27 | Wild dogs | 56 (15/27; 95% CI: 37.3–72.4) | |||
| Yarrabah | 2008–2012 | 51 | Remote community dogs | SNAP (Idexx) | 2 (1/51; 95% CI: < 0.1–11.3) | [ |
| Cairns | 2007–2013 | 23 | Wild + urban fringe dingoes | Necropsy, Mff, SNAP (Idexx) | 44 (10/23; 95% CI: 25.6–63.2) | [ |
| Atherton | 2007–2013 | 5 | Urban fringe dingoes | Necropsy | 0 (0/5; 95% CI: 0–48.9) | [ |
| New South Wales | ||||||
| Murrumbidgee Irrigation Area (Southern NSW) | 1966 | Unknown | Necropsy dogs | Necropsy | 50 (unspecified) | [ |
| Sydney | 1968 | 62 | Dogs | Mff | 19 (12/62; 95% CI: 11.3–31.0) | [ |
| Sydney | 1971–1972 | 495 | Pound dogs | Necropsy | 4 (21/495; 95% CI: 2.8–6.4) | [ |
| Sydney | 1971 | 40 | Vet clinic dogs | Mff | 8 (3/40; 95% CI: 1.9–20.6) | [ |
| Sydney | 1972 | 339 | Pound dogs | Necropsy | 3 (9/339; 95% CI: 1.3–5.0) | [ |
| Hunter Valley/Coastal NSW | 1979–1981 | 331 | Greyhounds | Mff | 11 (36/331; 95% CI: 7.9–14.7) | [ |
| Sydney | 1981–1983 | 405 | Vet clinic dogs | Mff | 13 (51/405; 95% CI 9.7–16.2) | [ |
| Sydney | 1982–1983 | 68 | Red foxes | Necropsy | 9 (6/68; 95% CI: 3. 8–18.3) | [ |
| Sydney | 1983 | 100 | Pound dogs | Necropsy | 50 (50/100; 95% CI: 40.4–59.6) | [ |
| Sydney | 1987 | 100 | Pound dogs | Necropsya | 24 (24/100; 95% CI: 16.6–33.3) | [ |
| Sydney | 1987 | 100 | Pound dogs | Necropsy | 32 (32/100; 95%CI: 23.7 to 41.7) | [ |
| Sydney | 1992 | 304 | Pound dogs | Mffa | 12 (36/304; 95% CI: 8.7–16.0) | [ |
| 100 | Necropsya | 15 (15/100; 95% CI: 9.2–23.4) | ||||
| Collarenebri | 2008–2009 | 39 | Remote community dogs | SNAP (Idexx) | 0 (0/39; 95% CI: 0–10.7) | [ |
| Goodooga | 2008–2009 | 19 | Remote community dogs | SNAP (Idexx) | 21 (4/19; 95% CI: 8.0–43.9) | [ |
| Victoria | ||||||
| Melbourne | 1946 | 174 | Ownerless dogs | Necropsy | 0 (0/174; 95% CI: 0–2.6) | [ |
| North-eastern Victoria | 1978 | 752 | Pound dogs (734) | Necropsy | 2 (15/734; 95% CI: 1.2–3.4) | [ |
| Greyhounds (18) | 28 (5/18; 95% CI: 12.2–51.2) | |||||
| Melbourne | 1991–1994 | 125 | Red foxes ( | Dirochek® (Symbiotics) | 6 (8/125; 95% CI: 3.1–12.3) | [ |
| Northern Territory | ||||||
| Darwin | 1963 | Unknown | Dogs | Unknown | 70 (unspecified) | [ |
| Alice Springs | 1972–1976 | 98 | Vet clinic dogs | Mff | 13 (12/98; 95% CI: 0.1–20.3) | [ |
| Docker River + Indulkana | 73 | Remote community dogs | Mff | 0 (0/73; 95% CI: 0–6.0) | [ | |
| Katherine | 1988 | 32 | Dingoes | Necropsy | 56 (18/32; 95% CI: 39.3–71.9) | [ |
| Ti Tree | 2007–2009 | 48 | Remote community dogs | SNAP (Idexx) | 2.5 (4/48; 95% CI: 2.8–20.1) | [ |
| Tiwi Islands | 2008–2009 | 27 | Remote community dogs | SNAP (Idexx) | 0 (0/27; 95% CI: 0–14.8) | [ |
| South Australia | ||||||
| South Australia | 1988–1991 | 1658 | Dogs | Mff | 1 (19/1658; 95% CI: 0.7–1.8) | [ |
| Western Australia | ||||||
| Kimberly | 1993 | 58 | Remote community dogs | Necropsy | 0 (0/58; 95% CI: 0–7.4) | [ |
| Bidyadanga | 2008 | 15 | Remote community dogs | SNAP (Idexx) | 0 (0/15; 95% CI: 0–23.9) | [ |
aValidation of DiroChek® Symbiotics Corp. USA supplied by Commonwealth Serum Laboratories, Parkville, Victoria (now owned by Zoetis, NJ)
Abbreviations: 95% CI, 95% confidence interval; Mff, detection of microfilariae