| Literature DB >> 35928117 |
Célia Bernard1,2,3, Philippe Holzmuller1,2, Madiou Thierno Bah1,2, Matthieu Bastien3, Benoit Combes3, Ferran Jori1,2, Vladimir Grosbois1,2, Laurence Vial1,2.
Abstract
Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) is a viral zoonotic disease resulting in hemorrhagic syndrome in humans. Its causative agent is naturally transmitted by ticks to non-human vertebrate hosts within an enzootic sylvatic cycle. Ticks are considered biological vectors, as well as reservoirs for CCHF virus (CCHFV), as they are able to maintain the virus for several months or even years and to transmit CCHFV to other ticks. Although animals are not symptomatic, some of them can sufficiently replicate the virus, becoming a source of infection for ticks as well as humans through direct contact with contaminated body fluids. The recent emergence of CCHF in Spain indicates that tick-human interaction rates promoting virus transmission are changing and lead to the emergence of CCHF. In other European countries such as France, the presence of one of its main tick vectors and the detection of antibodies targeting CCHFV in animals, at least in Corsica and in the absence of human cases, suggest that CCHFV could be spreading silently. In this review, we study the CCHFV epidemiological cycle as hypothesized in the French local context and select the most likely parameters that may influence virus transmission among tick vectors and non-human vertebrate hosts. For this, a total of 1,035 articles dating from 1957 to 2021 were selected for data extraction. This study made it possible to identify the tick species that seem to be the best candidate vectors of CCHFV in France, but also to highlight the importance of the abundance and composition of local host communities on vectors' infection prevalence. Regarding the presumed transmission cycle involving Hyalomma marginatum, as it might exist in France, at least in Corsica, it is assumed that tick vectors are still weakly infected and the probability of disease emergence in humans remains low. The likelihood of factors that may modify this equilibrium is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: CCHF; France; Hyalomma tick vectors; vertebrate host communities; viral transmission cycle
Year: 2022 PMID: 35928117 PMCID: PMC9343853 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2022.932304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Figure 1Workflow summarizing the steps taken to classify the different articles in the literature and to select the categories of interest for our study.
Candidate tick species as vectors and/or reservoirs of CCHFV in France.
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| One assay where no infection in eggs hatched by infected females (data not available) |
| One-host tick | ||
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| No data | Immature stage mostly on birds and |
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| Mostly on dogs at any development stage |
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| No data | Immature stage mostly on rodents and insectivores |
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| No data | Immatures stage mostly on rodents and birds |
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| Immature stage mostly on insectivores, rodents and small carnivores |
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*Rhipicephalus rossicus: good vector but not present in France.
**The specific identification of Rh. sanguineus vs. Rh. turanicus is difficult and thus preferred to keep the group Rh. sanguineus sensu lato.
Colors were used to assess their role, with green, orange and red representing weak, middle, and high evidence of vector competence and/or vectorial capacity, respectively.
Candidate vertebrate hosts of H. marginatum and CCHFV that are present in France.
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| Host of immatures | Hedgehog | Infestation (Hungary, Ukraine, Turkey, ex-USSR): | Short-distance movements (0.5–3 km; home range of about 2 ha, up to 50 ha for some males) | |
| Lagomorphs | Short-distance movements | |||
| Rodents | Only African rodents tested, which are not present in France | Infestation of rodents and shrews is the exception, contrary to other tick species (ex-USSR) | Short-distance movements | |
| Birds | Majority of species develop no viremia (refractory): experimental infections failed on fowls, doves, and rooks. | Infestation (numerous reports in southern and northern Europe): |
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| Hosts of adults | Cattle | Infestation: RP variable according to zone | Long-distance movements through trade (from Spain) and national transhumance | |
| Sheep | Infestation: RP variable according to zone (0.03–0.05% to 82%) | Few importations | ||
| Goat | No experimental data available | Infestation: RP variable according to zone (0% in south of France) | Few importations | |
| Horse | Successful infection through inoculation, too low viremia to infect ticks, mild symptoms (fever, lethargy, inflammatory syndrome) | |||
| Donkey | Successful infection through inoculation, too low viremia to infect ticks, no symptom | Anecdotal infestation | Short-distance movements | |
| Wild boar | No experimental data available | Infestation remains low (Italy, Spain, Portugal, France): | Short-distance movements (<5–10 km; home range of 300–500 ha; up to 3,000 ha for males) | |
| Roe deer | No experimental data available | Short-distance movements (home range from 35 to 150 ha) | ||
| Red deer | No experimental data available | Low infestation compared to | Short-distance movements (home range from 800 to 3,000 ha) | |
IR, infestation rate of hosts by H. marginatum (number of hosts infested among hosts examined); RP, relative proportion of H. marginatum among other tick species infesting the same host species (number of H. marginatum among the whole amount of ticks infesting one-host species).
Their role as amplifiers of CCHFV, amplifiers of tick populations, and carriers of ticks infected or not with CCHFV is informed, with colors from green, orange to red for low, middle, and high evidence, respectively. A, Host of immature stages; B, Host of adult stages.
Figure 2Presumed enzootic transmission cycle of CCHFV in France, involving the candidate tick vector H. marginatum and its different vertebrate hosts. Animals are represented in different sizes according to relative host preferences of H. marginatum. The ability of these animals to replicate CCHFV is indicated by “+” for good CCHFV amplifiers and “–” for bad CCHFV amplifiers.
Figure 3Scheme representing factors that may impact either the exposure of animals to tick vectors or the CCHFV infection level of tick vectors, which could finally influence the CCHFV enzootic transmission in France.