Cargando…
European Surveillance for West Nile Virus in Mosquito Populations
A wide range of arthropod-borne viruses threaten both human and animal health either through their presence in Europe or through risk of introduction. Prominent among these is West Nile virus (WNV), primarily an avian virus, which has caused multiple outbreaks associated with human and equine mortal...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
MDPI
2013
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3823308/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24157510 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph10104869 |
_version_ | 1782290549770813440 |
---|---|
author | Engler, Olivier Savini, Giovanni Papa, Anna Figuerola, Jordi Groschup, Martin H. Kampen, Helge Medlock, Jolyon Vaux, Alexander Wilson, Anthony J. Werner, Doreen Jöst, Hanna Goffredo, Maria Capelli, Gioia Federici, Valentina Tonolla, Mauro Patocchi, Nicola Flacio, Eleonora Portmann, Jasmine Rossi-Pedruzzi, Anya Mourelatos, Spiros Ruiz, Santiago Vázquez, Ana Calzolari, Mattia Bonilauri, Paolo Dottori, Michele Schaffner, Francis Mathis, Alexander Johnson, Nicholas |
author_facet | Engler, Olivier Savini, Giovanni Papa, Anna Figuerola, Jordi Groschup, Martin H. Kampen, Helge Medlock, Jolyon Vaux, Alexander Wilson, Anthony J. Werner, Doreen Jöst, Hanna Goffredo, Maria Capelli, Gioia Federici, Valentina Tonolla, Mauro Patocchi, Nicola Flacio, Eleonora Portmann, Jasmine Rossi-Pedruzzi, Anya Mourelatos, Spiros Ruiz, Santiago Vázquez, Ana Calzolari, Mattia Bonilauri, Paolo Dottori, Michele Schaffner, Francis Mathis, Alexander Johnson, Nicholas |
author_sort | Engler, Olivier |
collection | PubMed |
description | A wide range of arthropod-borne viruses threaten both human and animal health either through their presence in Europe or through risk of introduction. Prominent among these is West Nile virus (WNV), primarily an avian virus, which has caused multiple outbreaks associated with human and equine mortality. Endemic outbreaks of West Nile fever have been reported in Italy, Greece, France, Romania, Hungary, Russia and Spain, with further spread expected. Most outbreaks in Western Europe have been due to infection with WNV Lineage 1. In Eastern Europe WNV Lineage 2 has been responsible for human and bird mortality, particularly in Greece, which has experienced extensive outbreaks over three consecutive years. Italy has experienced co-circulation with both virus lineages. The ability to manage this threat in a cost-effective way is dependent on early detection. Targeted surveillance for pathogens within mosquito populations offers the ability to detect viruses prior to their emergence in livestock, equine species or human populations. In addition, it can establish a baseline of mosquito-borne virus activity and allow monitoring of change to this over time. Early detection offers the opportunity to raise disease awareness, initiate vector control and preventative vaccination, now available for horses, and encourage personal protection against mosquito bites. This would have major benefits through financial savings and reduction in equid morbidity/mortality. However, effective surveillance that predicts virus outbreaks is challenged by a range of factors including limited resources, variation in mosquito capture rates (too few or too many), difficulties in mosquito identification, often reliant on specialist entomologists, and the sensitive, rapid detection of viruses in mosquito pools. Surveillance for WNV and other arboviruses within mosquito populations varies between European countries in the extent and focus of the surveillance. This study reviews the current status of WNV in mosquito populations across Europe and how this is informing our understanding of virus epidemiology. Key findings such as detection of virus, presence of vector species and invasive mosquito species are summarized, and some of the difficulties encountered when applying a cost-effective surveillance programme are highlighted. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-3823308 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2013 |
publisher | MDPI |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-38233082013-11-11 European Surveillance for West Nile Virus in Mosquito Populations Engler, Olivier Savini, Giovanni Papa, Anna Figuerola, Jordi Groschup, Martin H. Kampen, Helge Medlock, Jolyon Vaux, Alexander Wilson, Anthony J. Werner, Doreen Jöst, Hanna Goffredo, Maria Capelli, Gioia Federici, Valentina Tonolla, Mauro Patocchi, Nicola Flacio, Eleonora Portmann, Jasmine Rossi-Pedruzzi, Anya Mourelatos, Spiros Ruiz, Santiago Vázquez, Ana Calzolari, Mattia Bonilauri, Paolo Dottori, Michele Schaffner, Francis Mathis, Alexander Johnson, Nicholas Int J Environ Res Public Health Review A wide range of arthropod-borne viruses threaten both human and animal health either through their presence in Europe or through risk of introduction. Prominent among these is West Nile virus (WNV), primarily an avian virus, which has caused multiple outbreaks associated with human and equine mortality. Endemic outbreaks of West Nile fever have been reported in Italy, Greece, France, Romania, Hungary, Russia and Spain, with further spread expected. Most outbreaks in Western Europe have been due to infection with WNV Lineage 1. In Eastern Europe WNV Lineage 2 has been responsible for human and bird mortality, particularly in Greece, which has experienced extensive outbreaks over three consecutive years. Italy has experienced co-circulation with both virus lineages. The ability to manage this threat in a cost-effective way is dependent on early detection. Targeted surveillance for pathogens within mosquito populations offers the ability to detect viruses prior to their emergence in livestock, equine species or human populations. In addition, it can establish a baseline of mosquito-borne virus activity and allow monitoring of change to this over time. Early detection offers the opportunity to raise disease awareness, initiate vector control and preventative vaccination, now available for horses, and encourage personal protection against mosquito bites. This would have major benefits through financial savings and reduction in equid morbidity/mortality. However, effective surveillance that predicts virus outbreaks is challenged by a range of factors including limited resources, variation in mosquito capture rates (too few or too many), difficulties in mosquito identification, often reliant on specialist entomologists, and the sensitive, rapid detection of viruses in mosquito pools. Surveillance for WNV and other arboviruses within mosquito populations varies between European countries in the extent and focus of the surveillance. This study reviews the current status of WNV in mosquito populations across Europe and how this is informing our understanding of virus epidemiology. Key findings such as detection of virus, presence of vector species and invasive mosquito species are summarized, and some of the difficulties encountered when applying a cost-effective surveillance programme are highlighted. MDPI 2013-10-11 2013-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3823308/ /pubmed/24157510 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph10104869 Text en © 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/). |
spellingShingle | Review Engler, Olivier Savini, Giovanni Papa, Anna Figuerola, Jordi Groschup, Martin H. Kampen, Helge Medlock, Jolyon Vaux, Alexander Wilson, Anthony J. Werner, Doreen Jöst, Hanna Goffredo, Maria Capelli, Gioia Federici, Valentina Tonolla, Mauro Patocchi, Nicola Flacio, Eleonora Portmann, Jasmine Rossi-Pedruzzi, Anya Mourelatos, Spiros Ruiz, Santiago Vázquez, Ana Calzolari, Mattia Bonilauri, Paolo Dottori, Michele Schaffner, Francis Mathis, Alexander Johnson, Nicholas European Surveillance for West Nile Virus in Mosquito Populations |
title | European Surveillance for West Nile Virus in Mosquito Populations |
title_full | European Surveillance for West Nile Virus in Mosquito Populations |
title_fullStr | European Surveillance for West Nile Virus in Mosquito Populations |
title_full_unstemmed | European Surveillance for West Nile Virus in Mosquito Populations |
title_short | European Surveillance for West Nile Virus in Mosquito Populations |
title_sort | european surveillance for west nile virus in mosquito populations |
topic | Review |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3823308/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24157510 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph10104869 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT englerolivier europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT savinigiovanni europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT papaanna europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT figuerolajordi europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT groschupmartinh europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT kampenhelge europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT medlockjolyon europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT vauxalexander europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT wilsonanthonyj europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT wernerdoreen europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT josthanna europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT goffredomaria europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT capelligioia europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT federicivalentina europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT tonollamauro europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT patocchinicola europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT flacioeleonora europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT portmannjasmine europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT rossipedruzzianya europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT mourelatosspiros europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT ruizsantiago europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT vazquezana europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT calzolarimattia europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT bonilauripaolo europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT dottorimichele europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT schaffnerfrancis europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT mathisalexander europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations AT johnsonnicholas europeansurveillanceforwestnilevirusinmosquitopopulations |