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1.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis ; 10(2): e0004432, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26849358

ABSTRACT

Rabies is a fatal zoonosis that still causes nearly 70, 000 human deaths every year. In Europe, the oral rabies vaccination (ORV) of red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) was developed in the late 1970s and has demonstrated its effectiveness in the eradication of the disease in Western and some Central European countries. Following the accession of the three Baltic countries--Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania--to the European Union in 2004, subsequent financial support has allowed the implementation of regular ORV campaigns since 2005-2006. This paper reviews ten years of surveillance efforts and ORV campaigns in these countries resulting in the near eradication of the disease. The various factors that may have influenced the results of vaccination monitoring were assessed using generalized linear models (GLMs) on bait uptake and on herd immunity. As shown in previous studies, juveniles had lower bait uptake level than adults. For the first time, raccoon dogs (Nyctereutes procyonoides) were shown to have significantly lower bait uptake proportion compared with red foxes. This result suggests potentially altered ORV effectiveness in this invasive species compared to the red foxes. An extensive phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that the North-East European (NEE) rabies phylogroup is endemic in all three Baltic countries. Although successive oral vaccination campaigns have substantially reduced the number of detected rabies cases, sporadic detection of the C lineage (European part of Russian phylogroup) underlines the risk of reintroduction via westward spread from bordering countries. Vaccine induced cases were also reported for the first time in non-target species (Martes martes and Meles meles).


Subject(s)
Rabies virus/physiology , Rabies/prevention & control , Rabies/veterinary , Animals , Baltic States/epidemiology , Dogs , Foxes , Humans , Phylogeny , Rabies/epidemiology , Rabies/virology , Rabies Vaccines/administration & dosage , Rabies Vaccines/genetics , Rabies Vaccines/immunology , Rabies virus/classification , Rabies virus/genetics , Rabies virus/isolation & purification , Raccoon Dogs
2.
PLoS One ; 10(10): e0141537, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26509266

ABSTRACT

Although rabies incidence has fallen sharply over the past decades in Europe, the disease is still present in Eastern Europe. Oral rabies immunization of wild animal rabies has been shown to be the most effective method for the control and elimination of rabies. All rabies vaccines used in Europe are modified live virus vaccines based on the Street Alabama Dufferin (SAD) strain isolated from a naturally-infected dog in 1935. Because of the potential safety risk of a live virus which could revert to virulence, the genetic composition of three commercial attenuated live rabies vaccines was investigated in two independent laboratories using next genome sequencing. This study is the first one reporting on the diversity of variants in oral rabies vaccines as well as the presence of a mix of at least two different variants in all tested batches. The results demonstrate the need for vaccine producers to use new robust methodologies in the context of their routine vaccine quality controls prior to market release.


Subject(s)
Animal Diseases/prevention & control , Animals, Wild , Rabies Vaccines/immunology , Rabies virus/immunology , Rabies/veterinary , Vaccines, Attenuated , Animals , Europe , Genetic Variation , Genome, Viral , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing , RNA, Viral , Rabies Vaccines/genetics , Rabies virus/genetics , Vaccination/veterinary
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