Iotti Bryan, Valdano Eugenio, Savini Lara, Candeloro Luca, Giovannini Armando, Rosati Sergio, Colizza Vittoria, Giacobini Mario
University of Turin, Department of Veterinary Sciences, Turin 10095, Italy.
Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Departament d'Enginyeria Informàtica i Matemàtiques, Tarragona 43007, Spain.
Prev Vet Med. 2019 Apr 1;165:23-33. doi: 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2019.02.001. Epub 2019 Feb 2.
Bovine viral diarrhea (BVD) is a viral disease that affects cattle and that is endemic to many European countries. It has a markedly negative impact on the economy, through reduced milk production, abortions, and a shorter lifespan of the infected animals. Cows becoming infected during gestation may give birth to Persistently Infected (PI) calves, which remain highly infective throughout their life, due to the lack of immune response to the virus. As a result, they are the key driver of the persistence of the disease both at herd scale, and at the national level. In the latter case, the trade-driven movements of PIs, or gestating cows carrying PIs, are responsible for the spatial dispersion of BVD. Past modeling approaches to BVD transmission have either focused on within-herd or between-herd transmission. A comprehensive portrayal, however, targeting both the generation of PIs within a herd, and their displacement throughout the country due to trade transactions, is still missing. We overcome this by designing a multiscale metapopulation model of the spatial transmission of BVD, accounting for both within-herd infection dynamics, and its spatial dispersion. We focus on Italy, a country where BVD is endemic and seroprevalence is very high. By integrating simple within-herd dynamics of PI generation, and the highly-resolved cattle movement dataset available, our model requires minimal arbitrary assumptions on its parameterization. We use our model to study the role of the different productive contexts of the Italian market, and test possible intervention strategies aimed at prevalence reduction. We find that dairy farms are the main drivers of BVD persistence in Italy, and any control strategy targeting these farms would lead to significantly higher prevalence reduction, with respect to targeting other production compartments. Our multiscale metapopulation model is a simple yet effective tool for studying BVD dispersion and persistence at country level, and is a good instrument for testing targeted strategies aimed at the containment or elimination of this disease. Furthermore, it can readily be applied to any national market for which cattle movement data is available.
牛病毒性腹泻(BVD)是一种影响牛群的病毒性疾病,在许多欧洲国家呈地方性流行。它通过降低牛奶产量、导致流产以及缩短感染动物的寿命,对经济产生显著的负面影响。在妊娠期感染的母牛可能会产下持续感染(PI)的犊牛,由于对该病毒缺乏免疫反应,这些犊牛在其一生中都具有高度传染性。因此,它们是疾病在畜群规模和国家层面持续存在的关键驱动因素。在后一种情况下,PI犊牛或携带PI犊牛的妊娠母牛的贸易驱动移动是BVD空间扩散的原因。过去对BVD传播的建模方法要么侧重于畜群内传播,要么侧重于畜群间传播。然而,针对畜群内PI犊牛的产生以及由于贸易交易导致它们在全国范围内的转移进行全面描述的模型仍然缺失。我们通过设计一个BVD空间传播的多尺度集合种群模型来克服这一问题,该模型考虑了畜群内感染动态及其空间扩散。我们聚焦于意大利,该国BVD呈地方性流行且血清阳性率非常高。通过整合PI犊牛产生的简单畜群内动态以及现有的高分辨率牛群移动数据集,我们的模型在参数化方面所需的任意假设最少。我们使用我们的模型来研究意大利市场不同生产环境的作用,并测试旨在降低流行率的可能干预策略。我们发现,奶牛场是意大利BVD持续存在的主要驱动因素,任何针对这些农场的控制策略相对于针对其他生产部门的策略而言,将导致流行率显著降低。我们的多尺度集合种群模型是研究国家层面BVD扩散和持续存在的一个简单而有效的工具,也是测试旨在控制或消除该疾病的针对性策略的良好手段。此外,它可以很容易地应用于任何有牛群移动数据的国家市场。