Ameni Gobena, Zewude Aboma, Tulu Begna, Derara Milky, Bayissa Berecha, Mohammed Temesgen, Degefa Berhanu Adenew, Hamad Mohamed Elfatih, Tibbo Markos, Barigye Robert
College of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, United Arab Emirates University, PO Box 15551, Al Ain, United Arab Emirates.
Aklilu Lemma Institute of Pathobiology, Addis Ababa University, PO Box 1176, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
J Epidemiol Glob Health. 2024 Dec;14(4):1397-1412. doi: 10.1007/s44197-024-00304-7. Epub 2024 Oct 8.
Pandemic zoonotic RNA virus infections have continued to threaten humans and animals worldwide. The objective of this review was to highlight the epidemiology and socioeconomic impacts of pandemic zoonotic RNA virus infections that occurred between 1997 and 2021.
Literature search was done from Web of Science, PubMed, Google Scholar and Scopus databases, cumulative case fatalities of individual viral infection calculated, and geographic coverage of the pandemics were shown by maps.
Seven major pandemic zoonotic RNA virus infections occurred from 1997 to 2021 and were presented in three groups: The first group consists of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI-H5N1) and swine-origin influenza (H1N1) viruses with cumulative fatality rates of 53.5% and 0.5% in humans, respectively. Moreover, HPAI-H5N1 infection caused 90-100% death in poultry and economic losses of >$10 billion worldwide. Similarly, H1N1 caused a serious infection in swine and economic losses of 0.5-1.5% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the affected countries. The second group consists of severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus infection (SARS-CoV), Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS-CoV) and Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) with case fatalities of 9.6%, 34.3% and 2.0%, respectively in humans; but this group only caused mild infections in animals. The third group consists of Ebola and Zika virus infections with case fatalities of 39.5% and 0.02%, respectively in humans but causing only mild infections in animals.
Similar infections are expected in the near future, and hence strict implementation of conventional biosecurity-based measures and development of efficacious vaccines would help minimize the impacts of the next pandemic infection.
大流行性人畜共患RNA病毒感染持续威胁着全球人类和动物。本综述的目的是强调1997年至2021年间发生的大流行性人畜共患RNA病毒感染的流行病学及社会经济影响。
从科学网、PubMed、谷歌学术和Scopus数据库进行文献检索,计算个体病毒感染的累计病死率,并通过地图展示大流行的地理覆盖范围。
1997年至2021年发生了7次主要的大流行性人畜共患RNA病毒感染,并分为三组:第一组包括高致病性禽流感(HPAI-H5N1)和猪源流感(H1N1)病毒,人类累计病死率分别为53.5%和0.5%。此外,HPAI-H5N1感染导致家禽90%-100%死亡,全球经济损失超过100亿美元。同样,H1N1在猪中引发严重感染,受影响国家的经济损失占国内生产总值(GDP)的0.5%-1.5%。第二组包括严重急性呼吸综合征相关冠状病毒感染(SARS-CoV)、中东呼吸综合征(MERS-CoV)和2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19),人类病死率分别为9.6%、34.3%和2.0%;但该组仅在动物中引起轻度感染。第三组包括埃博拉病毒和寨卡病毒感染,人类病死率分别为39.5%和0.02%,但仅在动物中引起轻度感染。
预计在不久的将来会发生类似感染,因此严格实施基于传统生物安全的措施和研发有效的疫苗将有助于最大限度地减少下一次大流行感染的影响。