Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany.
Postgraduate Training for Applied Epidemiology (PAE), Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany affiliated with the ECDC Fellowship Programme, Field Epidemiology path (EPIET), European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), Solna, Sweden.
Emerg Microbes Infect. 2023 Dec;12(1):e2174778. doi: 10.1080/22221751.2023.2174778.
In 2018, Borna Disease Virus 1 (BoDV-1) was confirmed as a human zoonotic pathogen causing rare but fatal encephalitis in Germany. While diagnostic procedures and the clinical picture have been described, epidemiology remains mysterious. Though endemic areas and a natural reservoir host have been identified with the shrew shedding virus in secretions, transmission events, routes and risk factors are unclear. We performed the first comprehensive epidemiological study, combining a large case series with the first case-control study: We interviewed family members of 20 PCR-confirmed BoDV-1 encephalitis cases deceased in 1996-2021 with a standardized questionnaire covering medical history, housing environment, profession, animal contacts, outdoor activities, travel, and nutrition. Cases' median age was 51 (range 11-79) years, 12/20 were female, and 18/20 lived in the federal state of Bavaria in Southeastern Germany. None had a known relevant pre-existing medical condition. None of the interviews yielded a transmission event such as direct shrew contact, but peridomestic shrew presence was confirmed in 13 cases supporting environmental transmission. Residency in rural areas endemic for animal BoDV-1 was the common denominator of all cases. A subsequent individually matched case-control study revealed residence close to nature in a stand-alone location or on the fringe of the settlement as a risk factor for disease in multivariable analysis with an adjusted OR of 10.8 (95% CI 1.3-89.0). Other variables including keeping cats were not associated with disease. Targeted prevention, future post-exposure-prophylaxis, and timely diagnosis remain challenging.
2018 年,博尔纳病病毒 1 型(BoDV-1)被确认为一种人类人畜共患病病原体,在德国导致罕见但致命的脑炎。虽然已经描述了诊断程序和临床特征,但流行病学仍然神秘。虽然已经确定了地方性疫区和自然储主宿主——鼩鼱通过分泌物传播病毒,但传播事件、途径和风险因素仍不清楚。我们进行了第一次全面的流行病学研究,将大型病例系列与首例病例对照研究相结合:我们用标准化问卷对 1996 年至 2021 年期间去世的 20 例 PCR 确诊的博尔纳病病毒脑炎病例的家属进行了访谈,问卷涵盖了病史、居住环境、职业、与动物的接触、户外活动、旅行和营养等方面。病例的中位年龄为 51 岁(范围 11-79 岁),12/20 为女性,18/20 居住在德国东南部巴伐利亚联邦州。没有已知的相关既往疾病。访谈中没有发现任何直接接触鼩鼱的传播事件,但在 13 例病例中确认了近房鼩鼱的存在,支持环境传播。所有病例的共同特征是居住在动物博尔纳病病毒地方性疫区的农村地区。随后进行的个体匹配病例对照研究显示,居住在独立位置或在定居点边缘的自然环境附近是疾病的危险因素,多变量分析调整后的比值比(OR)为 10.8(95%CI 1.3-89.0)。其他变量,包括养猫,与疾病无关。有针对性的预防、未来的暴露后预防和及时诊断仍然具有挑战性。