Pastoral production is associated with increased peste des petits ruminants seroprevalence in northern Tanzania across sheep, goats and cattle
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Date
2019-07-18Author
Herzog, Catherine
de Glanville, William
Willett, Brian
Kibona, Tito
Cattadori, Isabella
Kapur, Vivek
Hudson, Peter
Buza, Joram
Cleaveland, Sarah
Bjørnstad, Ottar
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Show full item recordAbstract
Peste des petits ruminants virus (PPRV) causes a contagious disease of high morbidity and
mortality in small ruminant populations globally. Using cross-sectional serosurvey data col-
lected in 2016, our study investigated PPRV seroprevalence and risk factors among sheep,
goats and cattle in 20 agropastoral (AP) and pastoral (P) villages in northern Tanzania.
Overall observed seroprevalence was 21.1% (95% exact confidence interval (CI) 20.1–22.0)
with 5.8% seroprevalence among agropastoral (95% CI 5.0–6.7) and 30.7% among pastoral
villages (95% CI 29.3–32.0). Seropositivity varied significantly by management (production)
system. Our study applied the catalytic framework to estimate the force of infection. The asso-
ciated reproductive numbers (R0 ) were estimated at 1.36 (95% CI 1.32–1.39), 1.40 (95% CI
1.37–1.44) and 1.13 (95% CI 1.11–1.14) for sheep, goats and cattle, respectively. For sheep
and goats, these R 0 values are likely underestimates due to infection-associated mortality.
Spatial heterogeneity in risk among pairs of species across 20 villages was significantly posi-
tively correlated (R2
: 0.59–0.69), suggesting either cross-species transmission or common,
external risk factors affecting all species. The non-negligible seroconversion in cattle may
represent spillover or cattle-to-cattle transmission and must be investigated further to under-
stand the role of cattle in PPRV transmission ahead of upcoming eradication efforts.