| Literature DB >> 33802851 |
Ka Y Yuen1, Helle Bielefeldt-Ohmann1,2,3.
Abstract
Ross River virus (RRV) has recently been suggested to be a potential emerging infectious disease worldwide. RRV infection remains the most common human arboviral disease in Australia, with a yearly estimated economic cost of $4.3 billion. Infection in humans and horses can cause chronic, long-term debilitating arthritogenic illnesses. However, current knowledge of immunopathogenesis remains to be elucidated and is mainly inferred from a murine model that only partially resembles clinical signs and pathology in human and horses. The epidemiology of RRV transmission is complex and multifactorial and is further complicated by climate change, making predictive models difficult to design. Establishing an equine model for RRV may allow better characterization of RRV disease pathogenesis and immunology in humans and horses, and could potentially be used for other infectious diseases. While there are no approved therapeutics or registered vaccines to treat or prevent RRV infection, clinical trials of various potential drugs and vaccines are currently underway. In the future, the RRV disease dynamic is likely to shift into temperate areas of Australia with longer active months of infection. Here, we (1) review the current knowledge of RRV infection, epidemiology, diagnostics, and therapeutics in both humans and horses; (2) identify and discuss major research gaps that warrant further research.Entities:
Keywords: alphavirus; arbovirus; climate change; epidemic polyarthritis; equine; infectious disease; mosquito-borne disease; one health; zoonosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33802851 PMCID: PMC8002670 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens10030357
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Classification of common alphaviruses.
| Family | Genus | Disease Classification (Geographical Classification) | Examples | Commonly Used Abbreviations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Alphavirus | Arthritogenic | Barmah Forest virus | BFV |
| Chikungunya virus | CHIKV | |||
| Getah virus | GETV | |||
| Ross River virus | RRV | |||
| Sindbis virus | SINV | |||
| Encephalitogenic | Eastern equine encephalitis virus | EEEV | ||
| Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus | VEEV | |||
| Western equine encephalitis virus | WEEV |
Summary of clinical findings of horses infected with Ross River virus naturally.
| Azuolas, J.K. et al. [ | El-Hage, C.M. et al. [ | Barton, A.J. et al. [ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Study design | Prospective study | Case series | Longitudinal case series |
| Number of horses | 750 1 | 4 | 5 |
| Location | New South Wales and Victoria | Bellarine Peninsula, Victoria | Lockyer Valley, Queensland |
|
| |||
| Lethary/exercise intolerance/poor performance | 5/5 | 2/4 | 5/5 |
| Pyrexia | — | 3/4 | 2/5 |
| Submandibular lymphadenopathy | — | 4/4 | — |
| Oral petechiae | — | 2/4 | — |
| Tachypnoea | — | — | 3/5 |
| Tachycardia | 2/5 | — | — |
| Muscle pain/stiffness | 4/5 | 2/4 | 5/5 |
| Lameness | 4/5 | 1/4 | 2/5 |
| Limb oedema | — | 3/4 | 2/5 |
| Synovial effusion | 2/5 | 1/4 | 2/5 |
| Inappetence/colic | 1/5 | ¼ | 2/5 |
| Ataxia/incoordination | 4/5 | — | — |
|
| |||
| Hyperfibrinogenaemia | — | 3/3 | — |
| Hyperglobulinaemia | — | 3/3 | — |
| Neutropenia | — | — | 1/5 |
| Anaemia | — | — | 1/5 |
| Lymphocytosis | — | — | 1/5 |
| Lymphopenia | 1/5 | ||
| Creatinine kinase | — | — | 1/5 |
| Aspartate aminotransferase | — | — | 1/5 |
|
| |||
| IgM titre (range) | 1:5120–1:81,920 | 1:5120–1:40,960 | 1:20,480 |
| IgG titre (range) | 0–1:40,960 | 0–1:10,240 | 1:20,480 |
| Viral neutralization test (range) | — | — | 1:160–1:2880 |
1 Only clinical sign from 5 horses; and serology from 3 horses were recorded.
Spatio-temporal distribution of notified human cases of Ross River virus infection in Australia, by state or territory and financial year. The number of reported cases are in parenthesis.
| State/Territory [Ref] | 2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | 2013–14 | 2014–15 | 2010–15 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| QLD | 24.7% 1 (1397) | 38.7% (1788) | 43.7% (1683) | 40.4% (1845) | 63.2% (6371) | 45.5% (13,084) |
| WA | 14.6% (827) | 33.2% (1533) | 28.0% (1081) | 32.5% (1485) | 12.3% (1236) | 21.4% (6162) |
| NSW | 11.6% (658) | 12.0% (556) | 13.0% (502) | 11.1% (509) | 16.1% (1618) | 13.4% (3843) |
| VIC | 23.6% (1334) | 5.9% (272) | 4.9% (190) | 3.5% (161) | 3.4% (339) | 8.0% (2296) |
| SA | 20.4% (1154) | 4.8% (222) | 4.6% (177) | 2.4% (111) | 1.2% (119) | 6.2% (1783) |
| NT | 4.7% (263) | 4.7% (219) | 5.5% (211) | 9.5% (434) | 3.7% (374) | 5.2% (1501) |
| TAS | 0.2% (9) | 0.4% (19) | 0.2% (6) | 0.4% (19) | 0.0006% (6) | 0.2% (59) |
| ACT | 0.2% (11) | 0.2% (8) | 0.1% (5) | 0.1% (5) | 0.001% (11) | 0.1% (40) |
| Total | 100% (5653) | 100% (4617) | 100% (3855) | 100% (4569) | 100% (10,074) | 100% (28,768) |
QLD = Queensland; WA = Western Australia; NSW = New South Wales; VIC = Victoria; SA = South Australia; TAS = Tasmania; ACT = Australian Capital Territory; Ref = Reference. 1 % shown reflects distribution of nationally reported cases among each state or territory per year.
Ross River virus serological surveys in horses in Australia.
| Location | Year | Total Number of Horses | Sero-Positive Rate | Method | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| North QLD (total) | Sept 2013–June 2014 | 287 | 91% | VNT | [ |
| Far North Coast to Tableland region (breakdown) | 38 | 82% | [ | ||
| Townsville to Burdekin region (breakdown) | 201 | 95% | [ | ||
| Mackay to Whitsunday region (breakdown) | 49 | 86% | [ | ||
| VIC, QLD, SA, NSW, WA | January–June 2011 | 982 | 21% | VNT or ELISA | [ |
| VIC | October 2000–March 2002 | 750 | 56% | ELISA | [ |
| Brisbane, QLD | November 1999 | 379 | 26% | VNT | [ |
| South coast of NSW | 1982–1983 | 120 | 62% | VNT | [ |
| South coast of NSW | July–August 1980 | 23 | 65% | VNT | [ |
QLD = Queensland; WA = Western Australia; NSW = New South Wales; VIC = Victoria; SA = South Australia; TAS = Tasmania; ACT = Australian Capital Territory; VNT = Virus neutralization test; ELISA = Enzyme-linked immune-sorbent assay.
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) interpretation for Ross River virus.
| Scenario | Sample 1 | IgM | IgG | Diagnosis | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1st | Neg | Neg | Pos | A negative result from the first blood sample may be due to recent infection and IgM titre has not risen to the detectable level. |
| 2nd | Pos | Pos | |||
| 2 | 1st | Pos | Neg | Pos | A detectable IgM titre, without IgG, in the first sample indicate recent infection (likely 7–10 days ago). IgM antibodies in some horses could persist for at least 5 weeks and potentially longer [ |
| 2nd | Neg/Pos | Pos | |||
| 3 | 1st | Pos | Pos | Pos | |
| 2nd | Neg/Pos | Pos | |||
| 4 | 1st | Neg | Pos | Pos | Indicate previously infected. Not recent infection. |
| 2nd | Neg | Pos | |||
| 5 | 1st | Neg | Neg | Pos | It is unlikely that the patient or horse seroconverted to IgG, without IgM, upon recent infection. Results from the first sample is possibly due to false negative result in either IgG or IgM. Therefore, inconclusive as to recent or previous infection. |
| 2nd | Neg | Pos | |||
| 6 | 1st | Neg | Neg | Neg | N/A |
| 2nd | Neg | Neg |
Ig = Immunoglobulin; Pos = Positive; Neg = Negative; N/A = Not applicable; 1 Sample 1 and 2 should be collected at least 2–4 weeks apart.