Force of infection of Middle East respiratory syndrome in dromedary camels in Kenya

Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is a zoonotic disease transmitted from dromedary camels to people, which can result in outbreaks with human-to-human transmission. Because it is a subclinical infection in camels, epidemiological measures other than prevalence are challenging t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Epidemiology and infection 2019-01, Vol.147, p.1-6, Article e275
Hauptverfasser: Gardner, E. G., Kiambi, S., Sitawa, R., Kelton, D., Kimutai, J., Poljak, Z., Tadesse, Z., Von Dobschuetz, S., Wiersma, L., Greer, A. L.
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container_issue
container_start_page 1
container_title Epidemiology and infection
container_volume 147
creator Gardner, E. G.
Kiambi, S.
Sitawa, R.
Kelton, D.
Kimutai, J.
Poljak, Z.
Tadesse, Z.
Von Dobschuetz, S.
Wiersma, L.
Greer, A. L.
description Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is a zoonotic disease transmitted from dromedary camels to people, which can result in outbreaks with human-to-human transmission. Because it is a subclinical infection in camels, epidemiological measures other than prevalence are challenging to assess. This study estimated the force of infection (FOI) of MERS-CoV in camel populations from age-stratified serological data. A cross-sectional study of MERS-CoV was conducted in Kenya from July 2016 to July 2017. Seroprevalence was stratified into four age groups: < 1, 1–2, 2–3 and > 3 years old. Age-independent and age-dependent linear and quadratic generalised linear models were used to estimate FOI in pastoral and ranching camel herds. Models were compared based on computed AIC values. Among pastoral herds, the age-dependent quadratic FOI was the best fit model, while the age-independent FOI was the best fit for the ranching herd data. FOI provides an indirect estimate of infection risk, which is especially valuable where direct estimates of incidence and other measures of infection are challenging to obtain. The FOIs estimated in this study provide important insight about MERS-CoV dynamics in the reservoir species, and contribute to our understanding of the zoonotic risks of this important public health threat.
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G. ; Kiambi, S. ; Sitawa, R. ; Kelton, D. ; Kimutai, J. ; Poljak, Z. ; Tadesse, Z. ; Von Dobschuetz, S. ; Wiersma, L. ; Greer, A. L.</creator><creatorcontrib>Gardner, E. G. ; Kiambi, S. ; Sitawa, R. ; Kelton, D. ; Kimutai, J. ; Poljak, Z. ; Tadesse, Z. ; Von Dobschuetz, S. ; Wiersma, L. ; Greer, A. L.</creatorcontrib><description>Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is a zoonotic disease transmitted from dromedary camels to people, which can result in outbreaks with human-to-human transmission. Because it is a subclinical infection in camels, epidemiological measures other than prevalence are challenging to assess. This study estimated the force of infection (FOI) of MERS-CoV in camel populations from age-stratified serological data. A cross-sectional study of MERS-CoV was conducted in Kenya from July 2016 to July 2017. Seroprevalence was stratified into four age groups: &lt; 1, 1–2, 2–3 and &gt; 3 years old. Age-independent and age-dependent linear and quadratic generalised linear models were used to estimate FOI in pastoral and ranching camel herds. Models were compared based on computed AIC values. Among pastoral herds, the age-dependent quadratic FOI was the best fit model, while the age-independent FOI was the best fit for the ranching herd data. FOI provides an indirect estimate of infection risk, which is especially valuable where direct estimates of incidence and other measures of infection are challenging to obtain. 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1469-4409
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subjects Animals
Asymptomatic Infections - epidemiology
Camelus
Coronavirus Infections - epidemiology
Coronavirus Infections - veterinary
Cross-Sectional Studies
Kenya - epidemiology
Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus - isolation & purification
Original Paper
Prevalence
title Force of infection of Middle East respiratory syndrome in dromedary camels in Kenya
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