Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas.
MD Anderson Cancer Center, Michale E Keeling Center for Comparative Medicine and Research, Bastrop, Texas; Departments of Veterinary Integrative Biosciences.
Comp Med. 2023 Jun 1;73(3):229-241. doi: 10.30802/AALAS-CM-23-000005. Epub 2023 Jun 2.
The vector-borne protozoal parasite causes Chagas disease in humans and animals. This parasite is endemic to the southern United States where outdoor-housed NHP at biomedical facilities are at risk of infection. In addi- tion to the direct morbidity caused by , infected animals are of limited biomedical research use because infections can produce confounding pathophysiologic changes even in animals with no clinical disease. In part due to concerns for direct transmission between animals, infected NHP at some institutions have been culled, removed, or otherwise isolated from uninfected animal populations. However, data that document horizontal or vertical transmission in captive NHP in the United States are not available. To evaluate the potential for inter-animal transmission and to identify environmental factors that affect the distribution of new infections in NHPs, we conducted a retrospective epidemiologic study of a rhesus macaque ( ) breeding colony in south Texas. We used archived biologic samples and husbandry records to identify the time and location of macaque seroconversion. These data were used to perform a spatial analysis of how geographic location and animal associations affected the spread of disease and to infer the importance of horizontal or vertical routes of transmission. The majority of infections were spatially clustered, suggesting that environmental factors promoted vector exposure in various areas of the facility. Although we cannot not rule out horizontal transmission, our data suggest that horizontal transmission was not a critical route for spread for the disease. Vertical transmission was not a contributing factor in this colony. In conclusion, our findings suggest that local triatome vectors were the major source of infections in captive macaques in our colony. Therefore, limiting contact with vectors, rather than segregation of infected macaques, is a key strategy for disease prevention at institutions that house macaques outdoors in the southern United States.
引起人类和动物恰加斯病的虫媒原生动物寄生虫。这种寄生虫在美国南部流行,那里的生物医学设施户外饲养的非人灵长类动物有感染的风险。除了由引起的直接发病外,感染的动物在生物医学研究中的应用受到限制,因为感染甚至会在没有临床疾病的动物中产生混淆的病理生理变化。部分由于担心动物之间的直接传播,一些机构中的感染非人灵长类动物已被扑杀、移除或以其他方式与未感染的动物群体隔离。然而,目前尚无关于美国圈养非人灵长类动物中水平或垂直传播的数据。为了评估动物之间传播的潜力,并确定影响新感染在非人灵长类动物中分布的环境因素,我们对德克萨斯州南部的一个恒河猴()繁殖群进行了回顾性流行病学研究。我们使用存档的生物学样本和饲养记录来确定猕猴血清转化的时间和地点。这些数据用于对地理定位和动物联系如何影响疾病传播进行空间分析,并推断水平或垂直传播途径的重要性。大多数感染呈空间聚集,表明环境因素促进了设施各个区域中的媒介暴露。虽然我们不能排除水平传播,但我们的数据表明水平传播不是疾病传播的关键途径。垂直传播不是该群体中的一个因素。总之,我们的研究结果表明,当地的三锥虫媒介是我们群体中圈养猕猴中感染的主要来源。因此,在美国南部户外饲养非人灵长类动物的机构中,限制与媒介的接触而不是隔离感染的猕猴是预防疾病的关键策略。