AI Article Synopsis

  • A study investigates a zoonotic parasite affecting both human and animal health, identifying infected meat as a significant source of human infections particularly in Europe.
  • The research utilized a systematic review of 226 publications and applied a Bayesian hierarchical model to estimate regional seroprevalence in various animal species, showing significant variation based on species, regions, and rearing conditions.
  • Findings revealed that seroprevalence was highest in Eastern Europe and lowest in Northern Europe, with outdoor-kept sheep showing the highest infection rate, emphasizing the need for better data and source attribution to address human infection risks.

Article Abstract

is a zoonotic parasite of importance to both human and animal health. The parasite has various transmission routes, and the meat of infected animals appears to be a major source of human infections in Europe. We aimed to estimate prevalence in a selection of animal host species. A systematic literature review resulting in 226 eligible publications was carried out, and serological data were analyzed using an age-dependent Bayesian hierarchical model to obtain estimates for the regional seroprevalence in livestock, wildlife, and felids. Prevalence estimates varied between species, regions, indoor/outdoor rearing, and types of detection methods applied. The lowest estimated seroprevalence was observed for indoor-kept lagomorphs at 4.8% (95% CI: 1.8-7.5%) and the highest for outdoor-kept sheep at 63.3% (95% CI: 53.0-79.3%). Overall, seroprevalence estimates were highest within Eastern Europe, whilst being lowest in Northern Europe. Prevalence data based on direct detection methods were scarce and were not modelled but rather directly summarized by species. The outcomes of the meta-analysis can be used to extrapolate data to areas with a lack of data and provide valuable inputs for future source attribution approaches aiming to estimate the relative contribution of different sources of human infection.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9865579PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens12010097DOI Listing

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