| Literature DB >> 32288979 |
Abstract
The Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is a newly emerged infection in humans affecting the Arabian Peninsula, Europe, and North Africa. The source and persistence of the infection in humans remains unknown. The aim of this paper was to apply a risk analysis approach to the epidemiology of MERS-CoV and to understand the source of ongoing infections. The epidemiology of MERS-CoV was reviewed and compared to SARS. Each observed feature of MERS-CoV epidemiology was summarized and fitted to either an epidemic or one of two sporadic scenarios (either animal or deliberate release). As of May 2014, MERS-CoV has infected over 681 people and killed a further 204 over 2 years. In contrast, there were 8,273 cases and 775 deaths from SARS within 8 months. MERS-CoV has a more sporadic pattern unlike the clear epidemic pattern seen with SARS, and an unusual concentration of cases in the Middle East, without epidemics in other countries to which it has spread. SARS, with a higher reproductive number (R0), was eliminated from humans within 8 months of emerging, yet MERS-CoV, with a low R0 has persisted in humans over a far more prolonged period. This is at odds with the expected behavior of a virus with a low R0, which theoretically should not persist unless there are ongoing introductions of infection into humans, and poses the question "what is the source of continuing infections in humans?" A hospital outbreak in Al Ahsa, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA), had a classic epidemic pattern with some human-to-human transmission. However, 3 different strains were identified in that outbreak, an unexpected and unexplained finding for what appears to be a single source outbreak. Since this outbreak in April 2013, there has been a large increase in new cases, mainly in KSA in April and May 2014, with no corresponding epidemics in other countries. Yet MERS-CoV was present in KSA over several mass gatherings (which predispose to epidemics), including the Hajj pilgrimage, without an epidemic arising. Furthermore, although the virus has been identified in bats and camels, the mode of ongoing transmission to humans remains uncertain. Although some cases appear to be transmitted from human to human, and a few have animal or camel exposure, many cases have no history of contact with either animals or human cases. A high proportion of asymptomatic or otherwise undetected cases have been postulated as an explanation for the unusual epidemiology, yet active surveillance does not support this. When the observed data were fitted to different disease patterns, the features of MERS-CoV fit better with a sporadic pattern, with evidence for either deliberate release or an animal source. There are many discrepancies in the observed epidemiology of MERS-CoV, which better fits a sporadic than an epidemic pattern. Possible explanations of the unusual features of the epidemiology include human-to-human transmission with a large proportion of undetected cases; or sporadic ongoing infections from a non-human source; or a combination of both. Possible sources of ongoing sporadic infection in humans include animals (camels appear the most likely source), or deliberate release. The latter could explain 3 strains being present in a single hospital outbreak. Genetic testing should be conducted to determine whether the virus is evolving to be more transmissible. Better ascertainment of mild or asymptomatic cases is also needed. Finally, the discrepant epidemiology warrants critical analysis of all possible explanations, and involvement of all stakeholders in biosecurity, and deliberate release must be seriously considered and at least acknowledged as a possibility.Entities:
Keywords: Bioterrorism; Emerging infectious disease; Epidemiology; MERS-CoV
Year: 2014 PMID: 32288979 PMCID: PMC7104603 DOI: 10.1007/s10669-014-9506-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Syst Decis ISSN: 2194-5411
Fig. 1Epidemiologic pattern from time of first reported case–SARS vs MERS-CoV. Data sources: World Health organisation http://www.who.int/csr/disease/coronavirus_infections/en/ and http://www.who.int/csr/sars/country/en/
Fig. 2Cases of MERS-CoV since 2012. Data source: World Health organisation http://www.who.int/csr/disease/coronavirus_infections/en/
Supporting evidence of the epidemiologic pattern of MERS-CoV
| Supporting evidence of epidemiologic pattern | Epidemic (human to human) | Sporadic, animal source | Sporadic, deliberate release |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low case numbers for 12 months | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Low estimates of R0 | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Long persistence despite low R0 | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Some person-to-person transmission documented | ✓ | ? | ? |
| Hospital outbreaks | ✓ | ?a | |
| No epidemics arising from mass gatherings | ✓ | ? | |
| Evidence of multiple introductions in a single outbreak | ✓ | ||
| Several cases without an identified epidemiologic link to a human case of MERS-CoV | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Several cases without an identified epidemiologic link to a zoonotic source | ? | ✓ | |
| Several cases with no link to human OR zoonotic source | ✓ | ||
| MERS-CoV identified in camels | ✓ | ||
| Multiple genetic strains in a single hospital outbreak at Al Ahsa Hospital | ?b | ✓ | |
| Active surveillance had not found evidence of a high proportion of undetected cases | ✓ | ✓ |
aDeliberate release inside hospitals could explain this
bFor this to be the explanation, simultaneous animal exposure would have to have occurred to animal hosts carrying different strains in the same time frame to cause concurrent human infections from different sources