Dept of Comparative Biology and Experimental Medicine, Host-Parasite Interactions Program, University of Calgary, Canada.
CSIRO Agriculture and Food, St. Lucia, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia.
Int J Parasitol. 2021 Dec;51(13-14):1133-1151. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2021.10.007. Epub 2021 Nov 12.
This review article provides an historical perspective on some of the major research advances of relevance to ruminant livestock gastrointestinal nematode control over the last 50 years. Over this period, gastrointestinal nematode control has been dominated by the use of broad-spectrum anthelmintic drugs. Whilst this has provided unprecedented levels of successful control for many years, this approach has been gradually breaking down for more than two decades and is increasingly unsustainable which is due, at least in part, to the emergence of anthelmintic drug resistance and a number of other factors discussed in this article. We first cover the remarkable success story of the discovery and development of broad-spectrum anthelmintic drugs, the changing face of anthelmintic drug discovery research and the emergence of anthelmintic resistance. This is followed by a review of some of the major advances in the increasingly important area of non-pharmaceutical gastrointestinal nematode control including immunology and vaccine development, epidemiological modelling and some of the alternative control strategies such as breeding for host resistance, refugia-based methods and biological control. The last 50 years have witnessed remarkable innovation and success in research aiming to improve ruminant livestock gastrointestinal nematode control, particularly given the relatively small size of the research community and limited funding. In spite of this, the growing global demand for livestock products, together with the need to maximise production efficiencies, reduce environmental impacts and safeguard animal welfare - as well as specific challenges such as anthelmintic drug resistance and climate change- mean that gastrointestinal nematode researchers will need to be as innovative in the next 50 years as in the last.
这篇综述文章提供了一个历史视角,回顾了过去 50 年来与反刍动物胃肠道线虫控制相关的一些主要研究进展。在这一时期,胃肠道线虫的控制主要依赖于广谱驱虫药物的使用。虽然这种方法在多年来提供了前所未有的成功控制,但这种方法已经逐渐失效了二十多年,而且越来越不可持续,这至少部分归因于驱虫药物耐药性的出现和本文讨论的其他一些因素。我们首先介绍了广谱驱虫药物的发现和发展这一非凡的成功故事,讨论了驱虫药物发现研究的变化以及驱虫药物耐药性的出现。接下来,我们回顾了一些非药物胃肠道线虫控制领域的重要进展,包括免疫学和疫苗开发、流行病学建模以及一些替代控制策略,如宿主抗性选育、保护区方法和生物防治。在过去的 50 年里,反刍动物胃肠道线虫控制的研究取得了显著的创新和成功,特别是考虑到研究社区的规模相对较小和资金有限。尽管如此,全球对牲畜产品的需求不断增长,加上需要最大限度地提高生产效率、减少环境影响和保障动物福利,以及驱虫药物耐药性和气候变化等具体挑战,意味着胃肠道线虫研究人员在未来 50 年需要像过去 50 年一样具有创新性。