1
A systematic review of
zoonoses transmission and
livestock/wildlife interactions-
preliminary findings
Delia Grace; Dirk Pfeiffer; Richard Kock; Jonathan Rushton, Florence Mutua; John McDermott,
Bryony Jones
International Livestock Research Institute
Royal Veterinary College, London
Evidence….
Attribution
Impacts
Implementation
2
BMJ
3
Review question
…synthesise best available scientific knowledge
about zoonotic disease transmission through
direct or indirect interactions between domestic
livestock and wildlife,
….with an emphasis on risk factors, drivers and
trajectories of transmission,
…..and promising interventions for controlling
important zoonoses based on managing domestic
livestock/wildlife interaction.
4
Review approach: Reduction and
Integration
1. One over-arching issue identified by study
commissioner (DFID)
2. Five questions set by study commissioner
3. Eight themes identified by review team
1. Transmission routes & wildlife
2. Pathogen recombination
3. Risk factors for transmission
4. Drivers influencing interaction
5. Historical changes and trends
6. Livestock production systems
7. Socio-economic, institutional & political factors
8. Risk management and control
Livestock/wildlife interactions
implications for zoonoses
5
Approach
Multi-disciplinary team
Veterinary epidemiologists x 2
Veterinary public health x 2
Agricultural systems x 1
Gender specialist x 1
Economist x 1
Ecologist x 1
Virologist x 1
Research assistants x 2
Co-ordinator x 1
Collaboration with Health Map
50% female
25% DC
6
Methodology
1: Overview of relevant zoonoses
Generate a data-base of non-trivial zoonoses
From this develop a long-list of zoonoses which
meet study criteria:
– Involve domestic livestock
– Involve wildlife
– Relevant to developing countries
Develop short-list of ‘information-rich’ zoonoses
relevant to research themes
7
Methodology
2. Systematic review by experts
Identify major research themes
Develop set of search criteria for each theme
Write algorithms for search
Identify relevant literature databases
Retrieve abstracts
Blind review of abstracts by at least two experts
Retrieve full papers where experts agree
Evaluate quality and capture key findings from
papers
Interpret and present balanced summary
Too many papers, too little relevance
– 3, 346, 224 papers identified by first search!!
Trade-off
– But when only original studies that matched all criteria and
were high on the ‘hierarchy of evidence ladder’ were
included, too few papers
Response
– Only key databases
– Pre-screen by research assistants
– Only recent time-periods
– Apply more specificity
– For themes with specific questions take narrow definitions
and for broader themes, broader definitions
8
Problems encountered and how
we dealt with them
Process example
Theme 8 - management
Pub Med search 106,557 abstracts identified
Refining the criteria resulted in 1,000 abstracts
Of these 94 were sent to experts – (74 from Obj 8 +7 additional
from obj 3+13 additional from obj 1)
– Reviewer 1 – 37 considered relevant
– Reviewer 2 – 45
– Both agreed – 24
– Full paper was available - 22
Additional papers identified by experts – 2 by first, 5 by
second(sum of 7)
Captured and synthesised - 22
6 of the 22 were original research papers
9
Preliminary findings for 5
key areas
1. Overview of the extent of the problem of zoonoses, setting
the context for the relative importance of the wildlife:
domestic livestock transmission route
2. Wildlife species implicated in the transfer of disease from
livestock to humans and what are the key factors which
influence the risk of transmission
3. Wildlife species which could become key candidates for
transfer of disease in the future and why
4. Drivers changing interaction between wildlife and livestock
and key characteristics influencing the risk of transmission
5. Interventions to limit interaction of wildlife with livestock and
the potential impacts of those interventions.
10
1. Overview of the extent of the problem of zoonoses, setting the
context for the relative importance of the wildlife: domestic
livestock transmission route
Zoonoses frequent, neglected but not burdensome-
responsible for 1% DALYs in low income countries
– Most of this transmission probably comes from
domesticated animals, most involves wildlife
Zoonoses are more important as emerging diseases
responsible for 6% DALYs in low income countries
– Most of this from wildlife
Database of zoonoses which involve wildlife and livestock and
identification of the most problematic
No clear distinction between livestock, pets, pests,
companions, ferals etc
Third epidemiological transition? – low probability, but high
impact
11
2. Wildlife species implicated in the transfer of disease from
livestock to humans and what are the key factors which influence
the risk of transmission
3. Wildlife species which could become key candidates for
transfer of disease in the future and why
Example of BATS
– Fly facilitating transmission within and between species
– Long life span relative to their size and metabolic rate
– Many live in large, dense populations
– Colonies may consist of mixed species
– Bats feeding generates leftovers for other species
– Bats living closer to people (Bangladesh, Australia)
– Hendra, Nipah, SARS, Ebola, Lyssa, RVF(?)
12
4. Drivers changing interaction between wildlife and livestock and
key characteristics influencing the risk of transmission
Human demography main driver and all it entails
– globalisation; urbanisation; demand driven food supply;
changing behaviour; development yet persisting poverty
Agriculture: land use change; production system change;
environmental nutrient enrichment; resistance
Wildlife: trade; bush-meat; fragmentation; biodiversity loss;
localised increases in population
Climate change overall good for disease but wealth
probably trumps warmth
Saw tooth – fragmentation good for some disease, bad for others;
biodiversity reduces pathogen loads but increases assortment
opportunities; extinction bad for some disease; pests good for pest
disease; conservation & leisure good for disease
13
5. Interventions to limit interaction of wildlife with livestock and
the potential impacts of those interventions
Habitat change / culling / population control
Biosecurity (e.g. bird flu)
Vaccination livestock or wildlife to stop spread &
humans to stop mixing
Conservation (works best for ‘charismatic’ species)
Regulation (e.g. wet markets in Hanoi)
– Ecosystem-based control
– Multi-sectoral assessment of control benefits (e.g. rabies,
brucellosis)
– From single disease to livelihoods focus and back again
(e.g. big 3, ecohealth, NTZ)
– Technology – reporting, diagnostics, treatment,
prevention
14
15
Conclusions - overall
Plethora of opinions but paucity of hard evidence
Prediction is difficult, especially about the future –
but 3 main scenarios can be suggested (third
epidemiological transition; business as usual; ascent of
EcoHealth)
Better understanding of epidemiology emerging –
(wildlife not a reservoir of disease but rather a co-sufferer,
supply, sink, and sanitiser of zoonoses)
Drivers complex, context relevant, shifting and
quantitative changes becoming qualitative
16
Management of many, but not all, zoonoses implies
intervention at livestock and wildlife, and
epidemiology will determine which
Epidemiology should (but doesn’t always) under-pin
management
Promising innovations – technologies and methods
and policy context
Most studies indicate livestock/wildlife zoonoses
under-managed in relation to potential impacts and
benefits
17
Conclusions - process
Systematic review may not be the best tool for this type of
broad and fuzzy question
(but generated new ideas, hypotheses for testing, opportunities
for collaboration with other teams, e.g. healthmap, and better
understanding of what we know and don’t know)
Experts were important in drawing opinion-based conclusions
in the absence of strong evidence
Clear need for more original and fundamental research; there
is sufficient suggestive evidence to justify it
Acknowledgements
This study was funded by the Department for
International Development, UK
HealthMap (USA) provided information for
mapping requested zoonoses
18
Multi-disciplinary review team: Bryony Jones, Declan Mckeever,
Delia Grace, Dirk Pfeiffer, Florence Mutua, Jarrah Young,
Jemimah Njuki, John McDermott, Jonathan Rushton,
Mohamed Said, Polly Ericksen, Richard Koch and Silvia
Alonso.

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A systematic review of zoonoses transmission and livestock/wildlife interactions: Preliminary findings

  • 1. 1 A systematic review of zoonoses transmission and livestock/wildlife interactions- preliminary findings Delia Grace; Dirk Pfeiffer; Richard Kock; Jonathan Rushton, Florence Mutua; John McDermott, Bryony Jones International Livestock Research Institute Royal Veterinary College, London
  • 3. 3 Review question …synthesise best available scientific knowledge about zoonotic disease transmission through direct or indirect interactions between domestic livestock and wildlife, ….with an emphasis on risk factors, drivers and trajectories of transmission, …..and promising interventions for controlling important zoonoses based on managing domestic livestock/wildlife interaction.
  • 4. 4 Review approach: Reduction and Integration 1. One over-arching issue identified by study commissioner (DFID) 2. Five questions set by study commissioner 3. Eight themes identified by review team 1. Transmission routes & wildlife 2. Pathogen recombination 3. Risk factors for transmission 4. Drivers influencing interaction 5. Historical changes and trends 6. Livestock production systems 7. Socio-economic, institutional & political factors 8. Risk management and control Livestock/wildlife interactions implications for zoonoses
  • 5. 5 Approach Multi-disciplinary team Veterinary epidemiologists x 2 Veterinary public health x 2 Agricultural systems x 1 Gender specialist x 1 Economist x 1 Ecologist x 1 Virologist x 1 Research assistants x 2 Co-ordinator x 1 Collaboration with Health Map 50% female 25% DC
  • 6. 6 Methodology 1: Overview of relevant zoonoses Generate a data-base of non-trivial zoonoses From this develop a long-list of zoonoses which meet study criteria: – Involve domestic livestock – Involve wildlife – Relevant to developing countries Develop short-list of ‘information-rich’ zoonoses relevant to research themes
  • 7. 7 Methodology 2. Systematic review by experts Identify major research themes Develop set of search criteria for each theme Write algorithms for search Identify relevant literature databases Retrieve abstracts Blind review of abstracts by at least two experts Retrieve full papers where experts agree Evaluate quality and capture key findings from papers Interpret and present balanced summary
  • 8. Too many papers, too little relevance – 3, 346, 224 papers identified by first search!! Trade-off – But when only original studies that matched all criteria and were high on the ‘hierarchy of evidence ladder’ were included, too few papers Response – Only key databases – Pre-screen by research assistants – Only recent time-periods – Apply more specificity – For themes with specific questions take narrow definitions and for broader themes, broader definitions 8 Problems encountered and how we dealt with them
  • 9. Process example Theme 8 - management Pub Med search 106,557 abstracts identified Refining the criteria resulted in 1,000 abstracts Of these 94 were sent to experts – (74 from Obj 8 +7 additional from obj 3+13 additional from obj 1) – Reviewer 1 – 37 considered relevant – Reviewer 2 – 45 – Both agreed – 24 – Full paper was available - 22 Additional papers identified by experts – 2 by first, 5 by second(sum of 7) Captured and synthesised - 22 6 of the 22 were original research papers 9
  • 10. Preliminary findings for 5 key areas 1. Overview of the extent of the problem of zoonoses, setting the context for the relative importance of the wildlife: domestic livestock transmission route 2. Wildlife species implicated in the transfer of disease from livestock to humans and what are the key factors which influence the risk of transmission 3. Wildlife species which could become key candidates for transfer of disease in the future and why 4. Drivers changing interaction between wildlife and livestock and key characteristics influencing the risk of transmission 5. Interventions to limit interaction of wildlife with livestock and the potential impacts of those interventions. 10
  • 11. 1. Overview of the extent of the problem of zoonoses, setting the context for the relative importance of the wildlife: domestic livestock transmission route Zoonoses frequent, neglected but not burdensome- responsible for 1% DALYs in low income countries – Most of this transmission probably comes from domesticated animals, most involves wildlife Zoonoses are more important as emerging diseases responsible for 6% DALYs in low income countries – Most of this from wildlife Database of zoonoses which involve wildlife and livestock and identification of the most problematic No clear distinction between livestock, pets, pests, companions, ferals etc Third epidemiological transition? – low probability, but high impact 11
  • 12. 2. Wildlife species implicated in the transfer of disease from livestock to humans and what are the key factors which influence the risk of transmission 3. Wildlife species which could become key candidates for transfer of disease in the future and why Example of BATS – Fly facilitating transmission within and between species – Long life span relative to their size and metabolic rate – Many live in large, dense populations – Colonies may consist of mixed species – Bats feeding generates leftovers for other species – Bats living closer to people (Bangladesh, Australia) – Hendra, Nipah, SARS, Ebola, Lyssa, RVF(?) 12
  • 13. 4. Drivers changing interaction between wildlife and livestock and key characteristics influencing the risk of transmission Human demography main driver and all it entails – globalisation; urbanisation; demand driven food supply; changing behaviour; development yet persisting poverty Agriculture: land use change; production system change; environmental nutrient enrichment; resistance Wildlife: trade; bush-meat; fragmentation; biodiversity loss; localised increases in population Climate change overall good for disease but wealth probably trumps warmth Saw tooth – fragmentation good for some disease, bad for others; biodiversity reduces pathogen loads but increases assortment opportunities; extinction bad for some disease; pests good for pest disease; conservation & leisure good for disease 13
  • 14. 5. Interventions to limit interaction of wildlife with livestock and the potential impacts of those interventions Habitat change / culling / population control Biosecurity (e.g. bird flu) Vaccination livestock or wildlife to stop spread & humans to stop mixing Conservation (works best for ‘charismatic’ species) Regulation (e.g. wet markets in Hanoi) – Ecosystem-based control – Multi-sectoral assessment of control benefits (e.g. rabies, brucellosis) – From single disease to livelihoods focus and back again (e.g. big 3, ecohealth, NTZ) – Technology – reporting, diagnostics, treatment, prevention 14
  • 15. 15 Conclusions - overall Plethora of opinions but paucity of hard evidence Prediction is difficult, especially about the future – but 3 main scenarios can be suggested (third epidemiological transition; business as usual; ascent of EcoHealth) Better understanding of epidemiology emerging – (wildlife not a reservoir of disease but rather a co-sufferer, supply, sink, and sanitiser of zoonoses) Drivers complex, context relevant, shifting and quantitative changes becoming qualitative
  • 16. 16 Management of many, but not all, zoonoses implies intervention at livestock and wildlife, and epidemiology will determine which Epidemiology should (but doesn’t always) under-pin management Promising innovations – technologies and methods and policy context Most studies indicate livestock/wildlife zoonoses under-managed in relation to potential impacts and benefits
  • 17. 17 Conclusions - process Systematic review may not be the best tool for this type of broad and fuzzy question (but generated new ideas, hypotheses for testing, opportunities for collaboration with other teams, e.g. healthmap, and better understanding of what we know and don’t know) Experts were important in drawing opinion-based conclusions in the absence of strong evidence Clear need for more original and fundamental research; there is sufficient suggestive evidence to justify it
  • 18. Acknowledgements This study was funded by the Department for International Development, UK HealthMap (USA) provided information for mapping requested zoonoses 18 Multi-disciplinary review team: Bryony Jones, Declan Mckeever, Delia Grace, Dirk Pfeiffer, Florence Mutua, Jarrah Young, Jemimah Njuki, John McDermott, Jonathan Rushton, Mohamed Said, Polly Ericksen, Richard Koch and Silvia Alonso.