Tackling hepatitis E virus spread and persistence on farrow-to-finish pig farms: Insights from a stochastic individual-based multi-pathogen model

•An individual-based model has been designed to represent HEV dynamics on a pig farm.•HEV dynamics varies depending on structural characteristics and farming practices.•Immunomodulating viruses dramatically affect the HEV risk for public health.•Improving farming practices and controlling IMVs would...

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Veröffentlicht in:Epidemics 2020-03, Vol.30, p.100369-100369, Article 100369
Hauptverfasser: Salines, Morgane, Rose, Nicolas, Andraud, Mathieu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•An individual-based model has been designed to represent HEV dynamics on a pig farm.•HEV dynamics varies depending on structural characteristics and farming practices.•Immunomodulating viruses dramatically affect the HEV risk for public health.•Improving farming practices and controlling IMVs would help mitigate the HEV risk. Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is a zoonotic agent of which domestic pigs have been recognised as the main reservoir in industrialised countries. The great variability in HEV infection dynamics described on different pig farms may be related to the influence of other pathogens, and in particular viruses affecting pigs’ immune response. The objective of this study was to develop a multi-pathogen modelling approach to understand the conditions under which HEV spreads and persists on a farrow-to-finish pig farm taking into account the fact that pigs may be co-infected with an intercurrent pathogen. A stochastic individual-based model was therefore designed that combines a population dynamics model, which enables us to take different batch rearing systems into account, with a multi-pathogen model representing at the same time the dynamics of both HEV and the intercurrent pathogen. Based on experimental and field data, the epidemiological parameters of the HEV model varied according to the pig’s immunomodulating virus status. HEV spread and persistence was found to be very difficult to control on a farm with a 20-batch rearing system. Housing sows in smaller groups and eradicating immunomodulating pathogens would dramatically reduce the prevalence of HEV-positive livers at slaughter, which would drop from 3.3% to 1% and 0.2% respectively (p-value 
ISSN:1755-4365
1878-0067
DOI:10.1016/j.epidem.2019.100369