| Literature DB >> 33195510 |
Aurelio H Cabezas1,2, Michael W Sanderson1,2, Victoriya V Volkova1,2.
Abstract
Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) has not been reported in the U.S. since 1929. Recent outbreaks in previously FMD-free countries raise concerns about potential FMD introductions in the U.S. Mathematical modeling is the only tool for simulating infectious disease outbreaks in non-endemic territories. In the majority of prior studies, FMD virus (FMDv) transmission on-farm was modeled assuming homogenous animal mixing. This assumption is implausible for U.S. beef feedlots which are divided into multiple home-pens without contact between home-pens except fence line with contiguous home-pens and limited mixing in hospital pens. To project FMDv transmission and clinical manifestation in a feedlot, we developed a meta-population stochastic model reflecting the contact structure. Within a home-pen, the dynamics were represented assuming homogenous animal mixing by a modified SLIR (susceptible-latent-infectious-recovered) model with four additional compartments tracing cattle with subclinical or clinical FMD and infectious status. Virus transmission among home-pens occurred via cattle mixing in hospital-pen(s), cowboy pen rider movements between home-pens, airborne, and for contiguous home-pens fence-line and via shared water-troughs. We modeled feedlots with a one-time capacity of 4,000 (small), 12,000 (medium), and 24,000 (large) cattle. Common cattle demographics, feedlot layout, endemic infectious and non-infectious disease occurrence, and production management were reflected. Projected FMD-outbreak duration on a feedlot ranged from 49 to 82 days. Outbreak peak day (with maximum number of FMD clinical cattle) ranged from 24 (small) to 49 (large feedlot). Detection day was 4-12 post-FMD-introduction with projected 28, 9, or 4% of cattle already infected in a small, medium, or large feedlot, respectively. Depletion of susceptible cattle in a feedlot occurred by day 23-51 post-FMD-introduction. Parameter-value sensitivity analyses were performed for model outputs. Detection occurred sooner if there was a higher initial proportion of latent animals in the index home-pen. Shorter outbreaks were associated with a shorter latent period and higher bovine respiratory disease morbidity (impacting the in-hospital-pen cattle mixing occurrence). This first model of potential FMD dynamics on U.S. beef feedlots shows the importance of capturing within-feedlot cattle contact structure for projecting infectious disease dynamics. Our model provides a tool for evaluating FMD outbreak control strategies.Entities:
Keywords: beef feedlot; environmental transmission; foot-and-mouth disease; infectious disease dynamics; mathematical modeling; meta-population; transmission dynamics; waterborne transmission
Year: 2020 PMID: 33195510 PMCID: PMC7543087 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2020.527558
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Definitions and values of parameters used in modeling potential foot-and-mouth disease transmission, infection, and clinical manifestation dynamics on U.S. beef cattle feedlots.
| Initial proportion of latent cattle in the index-pen | 0.05, Vector (0.005, 0.105, 0.020) | Assumed | |
| Beta transmission parameter for virus transmission via direct animal contact in a home-pen (animal−1 day−1) | 0.026, Triangular (0.020, 0.026, 0.031) | Derived from Chis Ster et al. ( | |
| Duration of latent period (days) | 3.2, Weibull (α 1.782, β 3.974) | ( | |
| Duration of subclinical period (days) | 2.0, Gamma (α 1.222, β 1.672) | ( | |
| Duration of infectious period (days) | 4.0, Gamma (α 3.969, β 1.107) | ( | |
| Duration of clinical period (days) | 7.5, Fixed | ( | |
| Duration of clinical infectious period (days) | (inf-sub) in each model simulation | ||
| Duration of clinical non-infectious period (days) | (cli-clininf) in each model simulation | ||
| δ | Rate of progression to subclinical infectious 1 status (day−1) | 1/lat | |
| θ | Rate of progression to subclinical infectious 2 status (day−1) | 1/(sub/2) | |
| ε | Rate of progression to clinical infectious status (day−1) | 1/(sub/2) | |
| γ | Rate of recovery from being infectious (day−1) | 1/cliinf | |
| τ | Rate of recovery from clinical disease after recovering from being infectious (day−1) | 1/clinon_inf | |
| υ | Proportion of home-pens with cattle just placed in the feedlot (dmnl) | 0.20 | Feedlot expert opinion |
| π | Morbidity rate for bovine respiratory disease (BRD) during the first 30 days since cattle placement in the feedlot | 0.162, Vector (0.050, 0.300, 0.050) | ( |
| ρ | Morbidity rate for other production diseases during the 200 days since cattle placement in the feedlot | 0.1280, fixed | ( |
| Probability for an animal with BRD to be pulled to a hospital-pen for treatment during the disease course (dmnl) | 0.8750, fixed | ( | |
| Probability for an animal with other than BRD production diseases to be pulled to a hospital-pen for treatment during the disease course (dmnl) | 0.6908, fixed | ( | |
| φ | Per-animal pull rate from a home-pen to hospital-pen due to BRD and other production diseases during the first 30 days since cattle placement in the feedlot (day−1) | 0.0052 | Calculated, |
| φ | Per-animal pull rate from a home-pen to hospital-pen due to production diseases between the days 31 and 200 since cattle placement in the feedlot (day−1) | 0.0004 | Calculated, |
| ς | Per-animal pull rate from a home-pen to hospital-pen due to clinical FMD (day−1) | 0.02800 | FMD expert opinion |
| μ | Mortality rate for animals with BRD and other production diseases (endemic infectious diseases and noninfectious diseases) (day−1) | Triangular (0.01, 0.03, 0.05) | ( |
| ψ | Mortality rate for animals with clinical FMD (day−1) | Triangular (0, 0.005, 0.010) | FMD expert opinion |
| Beta transmission parameter for virus transmission via direct animal contact in a hospital-pen (animal−1 day−1) | Same as | Derived from Chis Ster et al. ( | |
| Beta transmission parameter for virus transmission via fence-line direct animal contact (animal−1 day−1) | Assumed [ | ||
| Urine volume produced by an animal (L/day) | Uniform (8.8, 22.0) | ( | |
| Saliva volume produced by an animal (L/day) | Uniform (98, 190) | ( | |
| Volume of feces produced by an animal (kg/day) | Uniform (14, 45) | ( | |
| Virus quantity shed in urine [plaque forming units (PFU)/mL] by an animal in the FMD clinical high infectious status | Uniform (102.5, 105.5) | ( | |
| Virus quantity shed in saliva (PFU/mL) by an animal in the FMD clinical high infectious status | Uniform (106, 108) | ( | |
| Virus quantity shed in feces (PFU/mL) by an animal in the FMD clinical high infectious status | Uniform (102, 104.1) | ( | |
| Proportion of the cattle daily saliva volume deposited into the home-pen environment (dmnl) | 0.3, Vector (0.1, 0.5, 0.1) | Assumed | |
| Proportion of | 0.33 | Assumed | |
| Virus decay rate in the home-pen floor environment (day−1) | 0.28, Fixed | ( | |
| σ | Amount of the home-pen floor materials moved daily to the next home-pen in the row by pen-riders (g/day) (300 g per pen-rider round, two rounds per day) | 600, Fixed | Assumed plausible amount carried on horse hooves between pens |
| Width of a home-pen (m) | 61.0, Fixed | Typical industry value | |
| Length of a home-pen (m) | 75.2, Fixed | Typical industry value | |
| Depth of a home-pen floor top contaminated with the animal fresh secretions and excretions (m) | 0.02, Vector (0.02, 0.05, 0.03) | Expert opinion, typical pen surface loosened by hoof action | |
| Minimum infective dose of FMDv via oral exposure in cattle (PFU/mL) | 106, Fixed | ( | |
| Proportion of | (1- | Assumed | |
| Virus decay rate in water (day−1) | 0.12, Fixed | ( | |
| Volume of the water trough shared between two home-pens (L) | 6,000, Fixed | Expert opinion, typical tank size to provide sufficient water reservoir for cattle needs | |
| Minimum infective dose of FMDv via oral exposure in cattle (PFU/mL) | 106, Fixed | ( | |
| α | Power of the exponential function of decay in the airborne transmission with increasing distance between home-pen centroids (dmnl) | −3.5, Fixed | ( |
| Proportion of clinical infectious cattle in a home-pen | Modeled | ||
| Scaled distance between centroids of a home-pen | 1.0–22.4, Fixed | Euclidean distance between each two home-pen centroids scaled by the shortest Euclidian distance between two home-pen centroids in the feedlot | |
In the reference column: “Assumed” refers to parameter values assigned based on our knowledge/judgement. “Derived from [x]” refers to values that we estimated based on data in the cited references. “[x]” is the reference from which the value was adopted directly. “Expert opinion” refers to values obtained via personal communication with experts in the epidemiology of FMD, and in the feedlot industry.
dmnl, indicates the value does not have a unit of measure.
PFU, plaque forming units.
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the model of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) virus transmission and FMD clinical manifestation dynamics in cattle within home-pens and among home-pens in a beef cattle feedlot. S, susceptible; L, latent; I1, subclinical infectious; I2, subclinical infectious; I3, clinical infectious; C, clinical but no longer infectious; and R, non-infectious clinically recovered. The black solid arrows show the home-pen subpopulation progression through the infection and disease stages. The red solid arrows show the virus transmission via direct contact between infectious to susceptible cattle in the home-pens and hospital-pen. The purple solid arrows show the animal movements from home-pens to the hospital-pen and back to the home-pens, and the purple dotted arrows show the possibility that susceptible animals moved acquired infection in the hospital-pen and returned as latent to the home-pens. The orange solid arrows show the virus transmission via animal direct contact fence-line. The yellow solid arrows show the virus contaminated material transmitted by pen-riders. The blue circle with solid arrows shows the virus transmission via contaminated water-troughs shared by home-pens. The buckets with black dotted arrows represent the airborne virus transmission. The black triangles represent animal mortality in each of the infection and disease stages.
Figure 2Schematic of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) infection and clinical disease progression in individual cattle. The compartments of the modified SLIR model of FMD dynamics are indicated by letters: S, susceptible; L, latent; I1, subclinical infectious; I2, subclinical–infectious; I3, clinical infectious; C, clinical but no longer infectious; and R, non-infectious clinically recovered.
Estimated percentage of latent cattle and home-pens with latent cattle on a U.S. beef cattle feedlot depending on the outbreak detection day since foot-and-mouth disease introduction.
| FS1 | Cattle | <1, 4, 7 | 1, 10, 14 | 2, 14, 18 | 6, 18, 24 | 13, 24, 25 |
| Home-pens | 25, 25, 25 | 25, 25, 30 | 25, 30, 41 | 25, 35, 50 | 25, 50, 65 | |
| FM1 | Cattle | <1, 1, 2 | 0, 3, 4 | 1, 5, 5 | 3, 6, 6 | 4, 6, 7 |
| Home-pens | 7, 7, 8 | 7, 7, 8 | 8, 10, 13 | 8, 12, 18 | 8, 15, 25 | |
| FM2 | Cattle | <1, 1, 2 | 0, 3, 4 | 1, 5, 5 | 3, 6, 6 | 4, 6, 7 |
| Home-pens | 7, 7, 8 | 7, 7, 8 | 8, 10, 13 | 8, 10, 15 | 8, 13, 18 | |
| FL1 | Cattle | <1, 1, 1 | 0, 2, 2 | 1, 2, 3 | 1, 3, 3 | 2, 3, 4 |
| Home-pens | 3, 3, 4 | 3, 3, 4 | 4, 4, 7 | 4, 5, 8 | 4, 7, 11 | |
| FL2 | Cattle | <1, 1, 1 | 0, 2, 2 | 1, 2, 3 | 1, 3, 3 | 2, 3, 4 |
| Home-pens | 3, 3, 3 | 3, 3, 4 | 4, 4, 7 | 4, 5, 8 | 4, 7, 9 | |
Feedlot sizes and layouts modeled are detailed in .
We show results of latent cattle and latent home-pens on days 5–9 (only) of outbreak detection on each feedlot size and layout modeled because those were the most common days of outbreak detection for the three detection thresholds modeled (3, 5, and 10% clinical cattle in the index home-pen).
Target parameters investigated for associations with the projected outbreak's peak day with highest number of clinical cattle since foot-and-mouth disease introduction and the total outbreak duration on a U.S. beef cattle feedlot.
| Beta transmission parameter in home-pens ( | Triangular (0.02, 0.026, 0.031) | ||||||||||
| Bovine respiratory disease morbidity during the first 30 days of cattle placement in the feedlot (π) | Vector (0.05, 0.30, 0.05) | −0.01 | −0.05 | 0.03 | |||||||
| Depth of the home-pen floor top contaminated by fresh animal excreta ( | Vector (2, 5, 3) | −0.06 | −0.05 | −0.01 | −0.04 | −0.03 | −0.05 | −0.05 | −0.05 | −0.06 | −0.06 |
| Initial proportion of latent cattle in the index home-pen ( | Vector (0.005, 0.105, 0.020) | ||||||||||
| Fraction of saliva daily produced by the animal that is excreted into the home-pen environment (σ) | Vector (0.1, 0.5, 0.1) | 0 | −0.05 | 0.03 | −0.05 | −0.03 | |||||
| Duration of FMD latent period ( | Weibull (α = 1.782, β = 3.974) | ||||||||||
| Duration of FMD infectious period ( | Gamma (α = 3.969, β = 1.107) | 0.02 | −0.02 | ||||||||
| Duration of FMD subclinical period ( | Gamma (α = 1.222, β = 1.672) | ||||||||||
| Water intake by the animal per visit to the water-trough in the home-pen ( | Vector (1, 5, 4) | −0.02 | −0.08 | 0.01 | −0.09 | −0.10 | 0.01 | −0.01 | −0.05 | −0.06 | −0.06 |
Bold coefficients with .
Feedlot sizes and layouts modeled are detailed in .
Results of the following target parameters were not included in the table above because were found to be not influential to model outputs: mortality rate for animals with BRD and other production diseases (endemic infectious diseases and noninfectious diseases) (day.
Characteristics of projected foot-and-mouth disease outbreaks on a U.S. beef cattle feedlot.
| FS1 | 20 | 4,000 | 1 | 1 | 39, 49, 59 | 21, 23, 27 | 4, 6, 9 | 5, 6, 10 | 6, 7, 12 |
| FM1 | 60 | 12,000 | 1 | 1 | 46, 58, 69 | 25, 28, 33 | 4, 6, 9 | 5, 6, 10 | 6, 7, 12 |
| FM2 | 60 | 12,000 | 1 | 2 | 61, 74, 89 | 26, 31, 43 | 4, 6, 9 | 5, 6, 10 | 6, 7, 12 |
| FL1 | 120 | 24,000 | 2 | 2 | 60, 73, 86 | 33, 41, 48 | 4, 6, 9 | 5, 6, 10 | 6, 7, 12 |
| FL2 | 120 | 24,000 | 2 | 4 | 68, 82, 95 | 42, 49, 57 | 4, 6, 9 | 5, 6, 10 | 6, 7, 12 |
Outbreak duration was defined as the number of days since introduction of FMD latent cattle in the index home-pen on the feedlot until the last animal infected within the feedlot proceeded from the clinical high infectious stage to the clinical non-infectious stage.
Outbreak detection was assumed to occur via routine visual surveillance of cattle health by the pen-riders, on the day when proportion of cattle with clinical FMD in the index home-pen reached 3, 5, and 10%.
Figure 3The cumulative number of the home-pens infected with foot-and-mouth disease during a projected outbreak on a U.S. beef cattle feedlot. The lines represent the percentiles (brown lines the 90th percentile, blue lines the 50th percentile, and black lines the 10th percentile) for n = 2,000 simulated outbreaks in the feedlot of that size and layout sampling the values of the target parameters. Feedlot size and layout cases modeled: FS1 is a 4,000 cattle feedlot with one hospital-pen; FM1 is a 12,000 cattle feedlot with one hospital-pen; FM2 is a 12,000 cattle feedlot with two hospital-pens; FL1 is a 24,000 feedlot with two hospital-pens; and FL2 is a 24,000 cattle feedlot with four hospital-pens (in all the layouts n = 200 cattle per home-pen).
Figure 4Boxplot of the projected number of cattle with clinical FMD on the outbreak peak day for each of the feedlot size and layout cases modeled. The outbreak peak day was defined as the day with the highest number of clinical cattle (infectious and non-infectious) since the FMD introduction in each of n = 2,000 simulated outbreaks in the feedlot of that size and layout sampling the values of the target parameters. Feedlot size and layout cases modeled: FS1 is a 4,000 cattle feedlot with one hospital-pen; FM1 is a 12,000 cattle feedlot with one hospital-pen; FM2 is a 12,000 cattle feedlot with two hospital-pens; FL1 is a 24,000 feedlot with two hospital-pens; and FL2 is a 24,000 cattle feedlot with four hospital-pens (in all the layouts n = 200 cattle per home-pen).
Figure 5The fractional contributions of select target parameters to the variance in each the outbreak peak day with highest number of clinical cattle and the total outbreak duration in the feedlot since the foot-and-mouth disease introduction, estimated based on n = 2,000 simulated outbreaks in each of the feedlot size and layout cases modeled. Multivariable linear regression models were developed for each of the outcome variables of the projected outbreak peak day and outbreak duration and the target parameters as the predictor variables. For each outcome, the final regression model adjusted R2 statistic was partitioned to obtain the fractional contributions of the target parameters to the projected outcome variance. Outcomes: Peak—outbreak peak day, Duration—duration of the outbreak. Target parameters: beta transmission parameter for FMD virus transmission via direct cattle contact [Beta transmission parameter]; morbidity rate of bovine respiratory disease (BRD) during the first 30 days since cattle placement in the feedlot [BRD morbidity rate]; initial proportion of FMD latent cattle in the index home-pen [Proportion of latent cattle in index pen]; fraction of the daily saliva volume produced by an animal that is deposited into the home-pen environment [Fraction of saliva into environment]; and the durations of the FMD latent period [Duration of latent period], infectious period [Duration of infectious period], and subclinical period [Duration of subclinical period] in individual cattle. Feedlot size and layout cases modeled: FS1 is a 4,000 cattle feedlot with one hospital-pen; FM1 is a 12,000 cattle feedlot with one hospital-pen; FM2 is a 12,000 cattle feedlot with two hospital-pens; FL1 is a 24,000 feedlot with two hospital-pens; and FL2 is a 24,000 cattle feedlot with four hospital-pens (in all the layouts n = 200 cattle per home-pen).
Figure 6Boxplot of the projected duration of a foot-and-mouth disease outbreak on a U.S. beef cattle feedlot for n = 2,000 simulated outbreaks in the feedlot of that size and layout sampling the values of the target parameters, when the full model incorporating all the routes of FMD virus transmission among the home-pens or a model with one of the transmission routes excluded was simulated. a—all the routes of FMD virus transmission among home-pens incorporated, b—transmission via direct contact of cattle in the hospital-pens excluded; c—fence-line transmission between cattle in neighboring home-pens excluded; d—transmission of virus contaminated material between home-pens by the pen-riders excluded; e—transmission via contaminated water-troughs excluded; and f—airborne transmission excluded. Feedlot size and layout cases modeled: FS1 is a 4,000 cattle feedlot with one hospital-pen; FM1 is a 12,000 cattle feedlot with one hospital-pen; FM2 is a 12,000 cattle feedlot with two hospital-pens; FL1 is a 24,000 feedlot with two hospital-pens; and FL2 is a 24,000 cattle feedlot with four hospital-pens (in all the layouts n = 200 cattle per home-pen).
Figure 7Boxplot of the projected duration of a foot-and-mouth disease outbreak on a U.S. beef cattle feedlot for n = 2,000 simulated outbreaks in the feedlot of that size and layout sampling the values of the target parameters, depending on the power (α) of the function of an exponential decay in the probability of airborne FMD virus transmission with increasing distance between home-pens. *Baseline value used to simulate the models for the other analyses. Feedlot size and layout cases modeled: FS1 is a 4,000 cattle feedlot with one hospital-pen; FM1 is a 12,000 cattle feedlot with one hospital-pen; FM2 is a 12,000 cattle feedlot with two hospital-pens; FL1 is a 24,000 feedlot with two hospital-pens; and FL2 is a 24,000 cattle feedlot with four hospital-pens (in all the layouts n = 200 cattle per home-pen).
Figure 8Numbers of cattle in each of the foot-and-mouth disease infection and disease stages during projected outbreaks on U.S. beef cattle feedlots. The solid lines represent the 50th percentiles for the cattle numbers in the infection stages and the red dotted lines represent the 25th and 75th percentiles for the number of cattle with clinical FMD (infectious and non-infectious clinical cattle) of n = 2,000 simulated outbreaks in the feedlot of that size and layout sampling the values of the target parameters. Feedlot size and layout cases modeled: FS1 is a 4,000 cattle feedlot with one hospital-pen; FM1 is a 12,000 cattle feedlot with one hospital-pen; FM2 is a 12,000 cattle feedlot with two hospital-pens; FL1 is a 24,000 feedlot with two hospital-pens; and FL2 is a 24,000 cattle feedlot with four hospital-pens (in all the layouts n = 200 cattle per home-pen).