Grange Zoë L, Goldstein Tracey, Johnson Christine K, Anthony Simon, Gilardi Kirsten, Daszak Peter, Olival Kevin J, O'Rourke Tammie, Murray Suzan, Olson Sarah H, Togami Eri, Vidal Gema, Mazet Jonna A K
One Health Institute and Karen C. Drayer Wildlife Health Center, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, CA 95616;
One Health Institute and Karen C. Drayer Wildlife Health Center, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, CA 95616.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021 Apr 13;118(15). doi: 10.1073/pnas.2002324118.
The death toll and economic loss resulting from the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic are stark reminders that we are vulnerable to zoonotic viral threats. Strategies are needed to identify and characterize animal viruses that pose the greatest risk of spillover and spread in humans and inform public health interventions. Using expert opinion and scientific evidence, we identified host, viral, and environmental risk factors contributing to zoonotic virus spillover and spread in humans. We then developed a risk ranking framework and interactive web tool, SpillOver, that estimates a risk score for wildlife-origin viruses, creating a comparative risk assessment of viruses with uncharacterized zoonotic spillover potential alongside those already known to be zoonotic. Using data from testing 509,721 samples from 74,635 animals as part of a virus discovery project and public records of virus detections around the world, we ranked the spillover potential of 887 wildlife viruses. Validating the risk assessment, the top 12 were known zoonotic viruses, including SARS-CoV-2. Several newly detected wildlife viruses ranked higher than known zoonotic viruses. Using a scientifically informed process, we capitalized on the recent wealth of virus discovery data to systematically identify and prioritize targets for investigation. The publicly accessible SpillOver platform can be used by policy makers and health scientists to inform research and public health interventions for prevention and rapid control of disease outbreaks. SpillOver is a living, interactive database that can be refined over time to continue to improve the quality and public availability of information on viral threats to human health.
严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)大流行造成的死亡人数和经济损失鲜明地提醒我们,人类易受动物源性病毒威胁。需要制定策略来识别和描述那些在人类中具有最大溢出和传播风险的动物病毒,并为公共卫生干预措施提供依据。我们利用专家意见和科学证据,确定了导致动物源性病毒在人类中溢出和传播的宿主、病毒和环境风险因素。然后,我们开发了一个风险排名框架和交互式网络工具SpillOver,该工具可估算野生动物源病毒的风险评分,对具有未明确动物源性溢出潜力的病毒与已知的动物源性病毒进行比较风险评估。作为一个病毒发现项目的一部分,我们使用了对来自74,635只动物的509,721个样本进行检测的数据以及世界各地病毒检测的公共记录,对887种野生动物病毒的溢出潜力进行了排名。在验证风险评估时,排名前12的是已知的动物源性病毒,包括SARS-CoV-2。几种新检测到的野生动物病毒的排名高于已知的动物源性病毒。我们采用科学方法,利用最近丰富的病毒发现数据,系统地识别并确定调查目标的优先级。政策制定者和健康科学家可以使用公开可用的SpillOver平台,为预防和快速控制疾病爆发的研究及公共卫生干预措施提供依据。SpillOver是一个动态的交互式数据库,可随着时间的推移不断完善,以持续提高有关对人类健康构成病毒威胁的信息质量和公众可获取性。