Plum Island Animal Disease Center, Foreign Animal Disease Research Unit, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Greenport, NY, USA; Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education, PIADC Research Participation Program, Oak Ridge, TN, USA; Center for Epidemiology and Animal Health, Monitoring and Modeling, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Fort Collins, CO, USA; Department of Diagnostic Medicine/Pathobiology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, USA.
Center for Epidemiology and Animal Health, Monitoring and Modeling, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Fort Collins, CO, USA.
Prev Vet Med. 2022 May;202:105615. doi: 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2022.105615. Epub 2022 Mar 18.
The global interconnectedness of the pig-production industry and the diversity of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) viruses (FMDVs) currently circulating, makes modeling disease spread and control in FMD-free areas challenging. However, advances in experimental design and transmission studies create opportunities to strengthen our understanding and ability to model FMD transmission. In the current study, we estimated the duration of defined phases of FMDV infection in pigs by using data from a large collection of controlled in vivo experiments. Because the detection of low-levels of viral RNA does not correspond to infectiousness, an experimentally defined minimum threshold of FMDV RNA shedding in oropharyngeal fluids was used to estimate the onset of infectiousness in experiments in which transmission was not evaluated. Animal-level data were used in Accelerated Failure Time models to assess the effect of experimental design factors in the duration of defined phases of FMDV infection: latent, incubation, pre-clinical infectious, clinical infectious, and total infectious periods. The estimated means of the phases were latent: 25 h (95%CI 21, 29), incubation: 70 h (95%CI 64, 76), pre-clinical infectious: 36 h (95%CI 32, 41), clinical infectious: 265 h (95%CI 258, 272) and total infectious: 282 h (95%CI 273, 290). Virus strains and exposure methods had no significant influence on the duration of latency, incubation, or clinical infectious phases. By contrast, the estimated means of the duration of the pre-clinical infectious and total infectious phases were significantly influenced by virus strains, and the duration of the pre-clinical infectious phase was significantly influenced by exposure methods. This study provides disease parameters based on an estimated threshold of the onset of infectiousness and a probability distribution representing the end of infectiousness. Disease parameters that incorporate experimentally-based quantitative proxies to define phases of FMDV infection may improve planning and preparedness for FMD.
猪生产行业的全球互联性和目前循环传播的口蹄疫(FMD)病毒(FMDV)的多样性使得在无 FMD 地区模拟疾病传播和控制具有挑战性。然而,实验设计和传播研究的进展为加强我们对 FMD 传播的理解和建模能力创造了机会。在本研究中,我们使用大量受控体内实验的数据来估计猪感染 FMDV 的各个阶段的持续时间。由于检测到低水平的病毒 RNA 并不对应于传染性,因此使用在口咽液中排出 FMDV RNA 的实验定义的最小阈值来估计在未评估传播的实验中传染性的开始。使用动物水平的数据在加速失效时间模型中评估实验设计因素对 FMDV 感染各个阶段持续时间的影响:潜伏期、孵育期、临床前感染期、临床感染期和总感染期。各阶段的估计平均值为潜伏期:25 小时(95%置信区间 21,29)、孵育期:70 小时(95%置信区间 64,76)、临床前感染期:36 小时(95%置信区间 32,41)、临床感染期:265 小时(95%置信区间 258,272)和总感染期:282 小时(95%置信区间 273,290)。病毒株和暴露方法对潜伏期、孵育期或临床感染期的持续时间没有显著影响。相比之下,临床前感染期和总感染期持续时间的估计平均值受到病毒株的显著影响,临床前感染期的持续时间受到暴露方法的显著影响。本研究提供了基于传染性开始的估计阈值和代表传染性结束的概率分布的疾病参数。将实验为基础的定量代理纳入疾病参数来定义 FMDV 感染的各个阶段,可能会改善对 FMD 的规划和准备。