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Potential Reintroduction of VectorBorne Diseases

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Title: Potential Reintroduction of VectorBorne Diseases


1
Potential Reintroduction of Vector-Borne Diseases
  • Rebecca J. Eisen, Ph.D.
  • Division of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
  • Fort Collins, CO

2
Risk Assessment for Potential Reintroductions
  • Is the pathogen of interest likely to be
    reintroduced?
  • What factors are related to the likelihood of the
    pathogen being re-established following a
    reintroduction?
  • Specific examples
  • Yellow Fever
  • Dengue
  • Malaria
  • Plague

3
What are likely routes of pathogen reintroduction?
  • Introduction of infectious vectors
  • Introduction of infectious humans
  • Introduction of infectious zoonotic hosts

4
Re-introduction Transit between the
south-eastern U.S. and climatically similar
disease endemic regions
  • Air travel
  • Cargo ships
  • Exotic pet trade
  • Migratory birds
  • Intentional release

5
Reintroduction Vector-specific factors
  • Preferred breeding habitat of the vector is
    present at the site of origin
  • Host preference
  • Human-specific for maintenance in humans
  • Catholic feeder that frequently bites humans
    (bridging vector)
  • Vector efficiency
  • Extrinsic incubation period
  • Likelihood of surviving to the second bloodmeal
  • Efficiency of transovarial transmission
  • Ability to remain infectious long-term (e.g.,
    introduction of insects on ships)

6
Reintroduction Vertebrate host-specific factors
  • Duration of infectivity
  • Duration of incubation period
  • Pathogen load at or above transmission threshold
  • Degree of virulence

7
Vectorial Capacity Models
How many potentially infective mosquito bites
will ultimately be delivered by all vectors
feeding on a single host in 1 day?
m vector density in relation to the host a
probability a vector feeds on a host in 1 day
host preference index x feeding frequency b
the proportion of vectors ingesting an infective
meal that successfully become invective p
probability the vector will survive 1 day n
duration of the extrinsic incubation period (in
days) 1/(-lnp) duration of the vectors life,
in days, after surviving the EIP
Sir Ronald Ross
8
Establishment Vector-specific factors
  • Number of vector species
  • Density of vectors
  • Host preferences
  • Human-specific for anthroponotic cycles
  • Catholic feeders for zoonotic pathogens
  • Specific to non-human hosts to maintain zoonotic
    cycles
  • Seasonal host switching
  • Seasonal patterns of vector populations
  • Vector efficiency

9
Establishment Vector-specific factors
  • Length of the extrinsic incubation period
  • Duration of infectivity (e.g., overwintering)
  • Transovarial transmission
  • Length of gonotrophic cycle
  • Likelihood of surviving to second bloodmeal
  • Infection rate in vector population
  • Co-infections in vectors (and effect of secondary
    infection on transmission)

10
Establishment Host-specific factors
Susceptible
Exposed
Infectious
Recovered
  • Density of susceptible hosts (human or zoonotic)
  • Influenced by cross-immunity
  • Duration of immunity can infection burn out in
    small host pool? Herd immunity?
  • Reproductive rate of host (new susceptibles in
    population)
  • Density of infectious hosts (incidence)
  • Mortality/virulence
  • Likelihood of contact between infectious and
    susceptible hosts/vectors
  • For humans peridomestic vs. recreational risk?
    Time of year?
  • For non-human hosts seasonality will play a
    large role

11
Establishment Host-specific factors
  • Duration of infectivity (overwintering),
    virulence
  • Duration of incubation or latency period
  • Pathogen replication rate and time to
    transmissible level
  • Ability of host to support pathogen load at or
    above the transmission threshold long enough to
    transmit
  • Mobility of host during infectious period
  • Single or multiple host species

12
Establishment Host-specific factors
  • For zoonotic hosts, what taxa or guild?
  • Avian
  • frequently attracted to peridomestic environments
  • increased chance of contact with humans
  • Non-human primate
  • Not likely to establish in the southeastern US
  • Livestock
  • Small mammals

13
Establishment climate and landscape factors
  • Is the southeastern U.S. climatically and
    ecologically similar to regions of endemicity?
  • Type of breeding environment
  • Vegetation type
  • Growing degree days
  • Mean, maximum, and minimum temperatures
  • Is the southeastern landscape suitably connected
    to promote transmission?
  • If livestock serve as amplifying hosts, are
    agricultural areas connected (via transmission
    pathways) to urban areas?
  • Are zoonotic hosts and humans connected in the
    landscape?

14
Malaria
  • Malaria is a mosquito-borne protozoan infection.
    Plasomdium falciparum and P. vivax, the two most
    common species causing disease in humans, are
    maintained in anthroponotic cycles.
  • Incidence of disease is highest in sub-saharan
    Africa
  • Life cycle is strongly temperature dependent. To
    complete the life cycle in Anopheles mosquitoes,
    temperatures must be gt20C (often absent in
    highlands within endemic regions)
  • In southeastern U.S. Anopheles quadrimaculatus is
    a competent vector
  • Malaria was eliminated from the continental US by
    1950
  • Population shift from rural to urban
  • Improved water management, housing and access to
    medical services
  • Improved vector control, case finding and
    treatment
  • Malaria is the most commonly imported
    vector-borne disease with approximately 1,200
    reported annually
  • Reports of limited local transmission
  • New Jersey (1991), New York (1993 and 1999),
    Texas (1993), Michigan (1995), and Georgia (1999)

15
Dengue
  • Mosquito-borne (Aedes aegypti) flavivirus
    maintained in anthroponotic cycles
  • Denguelike illness was first reported in North
    America during an outbreak in Philadephia in
    1780.
  • Locally-acquired cases have been rare in the US
    in the past 50 years
  • From 1977 to 1995, more than 2,706 suspect and
    584 confirmed dengue cases were reported from
    travelers to endemic areas
  • Dengue is endemic in Mexico
  • From 1980-1999 62,514 dengue cases were reported
    from Mexican states bordering texas, whereas only
    64 locally-acquired cases were reported in Texas
    during the same time period (Reiter et al. 2003)
  • Incidence of disease affected by human behavior
  • Vector abundance was higher in Texas
  • Air conditioning, evaporative coolers, intact
    screens, greater distance between homes and fewer
    residents per household was protective

16
Yellow Fever
  • Mosquito-borne (Aedes aegypti) flavivirus
    maintained in sylvatic cycles by non-human
    primates in sub-Saharan Africa and tropical South
    America
  • Occurs seasonally coinciding with vector
    abundance
  • Incidence typically higher in Africa than South
    America likely because in Africa there are more
    species of competent vectors that frequently bite
    non-human primates and humans and there is a
    lower rate of immunity in the human population.
  • Epidemics occur when YFV is introduced into
    human-mosquito cycles in high density settings
  • Last epidemic in North America occurred in New
    Orleans, 1905
  • The virus was eliminated from the US through
    quarantine and mosquito control.
  • Only 3 imported cases of Yellow Fever have been
    reported since 1970 (IHR require proof of YF
    vaccination for travelers)
  • Aedes aegypti still abundant in southeastern US,
    but being displaced by the tiger mosquito Aedes
    albopictus
  • Despite reintroductions, probability of
    re-establishment is low because of the absence of
    zoonotic hosts and low contact rates between
    humans and infected vectors

17
Plague
  • Plague is a severe, primarily flea-borne
    bacterial zoonosis caused by Yersinia pestis
  • Identified in New Orleans in 1914 (244 of 378,563
    small mammals tested positive), following
    introduction via rat-infested cargo ships
    (continued maritime re-introductions through
    1934)
  • From 1914-1920, a total of 51 human cases were
    reported of which 18 were fatal 1 additional
    case (stowaway) was reported in October 1924
  • Xenopsylla cheopis implicated as primary vector
    (flea index as high as 18 in warmest months and
    rate of infection in rats increased with the flea
    index)
  • Elimination of plague in New Orleans was
    attributed primarily to intensive rat-trapping
    and secondarily to rat-proofing and removal or
    rat harborage
  • In an attempt to control plague, several
    ordinances were instated, resulting in several
    permanent sanitation improvements for the city
  • rat proofing, garbage storage and collection,
    animal-holding regulations, much improved system
    of wharves including inspection and quarentine

18
Conclusions
  • Although devastating at the time, previous
    epidemics of Yellow Fever, Dengue, Malaria, and
    plague led to improvements in sanitation, public
    health, vector control and quarantine
  • Provided such infrastructure is maintained or
    improved these vector-borne diseases are unlikely
    to re-emerge in the southeastern US

19
Acknowledgments
  • Ron Rosenberg
  • Brad Biggerstaff
  • Ken Gage
  • Ben Beard
  • Lars Eisen
  • Barry Miller
  • Chet Moore
  • Erin Staples
  • Tom Burkot
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