Serological surveillance and clinical investigation of glanders among indigenous equines in India from 2015 to 2018

Equine glanders is an infectious and notifiable bacterial disease caused by Burkholderia mallei. The disease has been reported in South American, African and Asian countries including India. Here, we present the outcome of glanders serosurveillance carried out between January 2015 and December 2018...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transboundary and emerging diseases 2020-05, Vol.67 (3), p.1336-1348
Hauptverfasser: Singha, Harisankar, Shanmugasundaram, Karuppusamy, Tripathi, Bhupendra Nath, Saini, Sheetal, Khurana, Sandip Kumar, Kanani, Amit, Shah, Nisha, Mital, Anupam, Kanwar, Pooja, Bhatt, Lenin, Limaye, Vinayak, Khasa, Vipin, Arora, Rajesh, Gupta, Sanjay, Sangha, Shivani, Sharma, Himanshu, Agarwal, Sharad Kumar, Tapase, Jayant, Parnam, Sunil, Dubey, Prasoon, Baalasundaram, Satya K., Mandal, Baidya Nath, Virmani, Nitin, Gulati, Baldev Raj, Malik, Praveen
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container_title Transboundary and emerging diseases
container_volume 67
creator Singha, Harisankar
Shanmugasundaram, Karuppusamy
Tripathi, Bhupendra Nath
Saini, Sheetal
Khurana, Sandip Kumar
Kanani, Amit
Shah, Nisha
Mital, Anupam
Kanwar, Pooja
Bhatt, Lenin
Limaye, Vinayak
Khasa, Vipin
Arora, Rajesh
Gupta, Sanjay
Sangha, Shivani
Sharma, Himanshu
Agarwal, Sharad Kumar
Tapase, Jayant
Parnam, Sunil
Dubey, Prasoon
Baalasundaram, Satya K.
Mandal, Baidya Nath
Virmani, Nitin
Gulati, Baldev Raj
Malik, Praveen
description Equine glanders is an infectious and notifiable bacterial disease caused by Burkholderia mallei. The disease has been reported in South American, African and Asian countries including India. Here, we present the outcome of glanders serosurveillance carried out between January 2015 and December 2018 to know the status of equine glanders among different states in India. A total of 102,071 equid sera from 299 districts of twenty‐one states and one union territory were tested for glanders. Samples were screened with Hcp1 indirect ELISA followed by confirmatory diagnosis by CFT. During this four‐year surveillance, a total of 932 glanders‐positive cases were detected from 120 districts of 12 states. The study also revealed increasing trend of glanders from 2016 onwards with maximum occurrence in northern India. Overall seroprevalence ranged between 0.62% (95% CI, 0.52–0.72) and 1.145% (95% CI, 1.03–1.25). Seasonal shifting from winter to summer (March to June) coincided with highest number glanders incidence with corresponding seroprevalences of 1.2% (95% CI, 1.09–1.30). The present surveillance unveils territorial ingression of glanders to six states like Jammu & Kashmir, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Delhi and Tamil Nadu. In addition, re‐emerging cases have been reported in Maharashtra, Haryana and Punjab after a gap of 10 years. Lack of awareness, little veterinary care and unrestricted movement of equids across state borders might have led to the introduction and establishment of the infection to these states. We believe that information from this study will provide a baseline data on glanders for devising surveillance and control strategies in India. Being a zoonotic disease, the persistence of glanders poses a potential threat to occupationally exposed humans especially equine handlers and veterinarians. Therefore, targeted surveillance of human population from each glanders outbreak is also recommended.
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The disease has been reported in South American, African and Asian countries including India. Here, we present the outcome of glanders serosurveillance carried out between January 2015 and December 2018 to know the status of equine glanders among different states in India. A total of 102,071 equid sera from 299 districts of twenty‐one states and one union territory were tested for glanders. Samples were screened with Hcp1 indirect ELISA followed by confirmatory diagnosis by CFT. During this four‐year surveillance, a total of 932 glanders‐positive cases were detected from 120 districts of 12 states. The study also revealed increasing trend of glanders from 2016 onwards with maximum occurrence in northern India. Overall seroprevalence ranged between 0.62% (95% CI, 0.52–0.72) and 1.145% (95% CI, 1.03–1.25). Seasonal shifting from winter to summer (March to June) coincided with highest number glanders incidence with corresponding seroprevalences of 1.2% (95% CI, 1.09–1.30). The present surveillance unveils territorial ingression of glanders to six states like Jammu &amp; Kashmir, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Delhi and Tamil Nadu. In addition, re‐emerging cases have been reported in Maharashtra, Haryana and Punjab after a gap of 10 years. Lack of awareness, little veterinary care and unrestricted movement of equids across state borders might have led to the introduction and establishment of the infection to these states. We believe that information from this study will provide a baseline data on glanders for devising surveillance and control strategies in India. Being a zoonotic disease, the persistence of glanders poses a potential threat to occupationally exposed humans especially equine handlers and veterinarians. 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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Bacterial diseases
CFT
ELISA
equines
Glanders
Handlers
Human populations
India
Occupational exposure
Serology
Surveillance
Veterinary surgeons
Zoonoses
title Serological surveillance and clinical investigation of glanders among indigenous equines in India from 2015 to 2018
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