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Exposure to diverse sarbecoviruses indicates frequent zoonotic spillover in human communities interacting with wildlife

Authors :
Tierra Smiley Evans
Chee Wah Tan
Ohnmar Aung
Sabai Phyu
Htin Lin
Lark L. Coffey
Aung Than Toe
Pyaephyo Aung
Tin Htun Aung
Nyein Thu Aung
Christopher M. Weiss
Kyaw Zin Thant
Zaw Than Htun
Suzan Murray
Linfa Wang
Christine Kreuder Johnson
Hlaing Myat Thu
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2023.

Abstract

BackgroundSarbecoviruses are a subgenus of Coronaviridae that mostly infect bats with known potential to infect humans (SARS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2). Populations in Southeast Asia, where these viruses are most likely to emerge, have been undersurveyed to date.MethodsWe surveyed communities engaged in extractive industries and bat guano harvesting from rural areas in Myanmar. Participants were screened for exposure to sarbecoviruses, and their interactions with wildlife were evaluated to determine the factors associated with exposure to sarbecoviruses.ResultsOf 693 people screened between July 2017 and February 2020, 12.1% were seropositive for sarbecoviruses. Individuals were significantly more likely to have been exposed to sarbecoviruses if their main livelihood involved working in extractive industries (logging, hunting, or harvesting of forest products; odds ratio [OR]=2.71, P=0.019) or had been hunting/slaughtering bats (OR=6.09, P=0.020). Exposure to a range of bat and pangolin sarbecoviruses was identified.ConclusionExposure to diverse sarbecoviruses among high-risk human communities provides epidemiologic and immunologic evidence that zoonotic spillover is occurring. These findings inform risk mitigation efforts needed to decrease disease transmission at the bat-human interface, as well as future surveillance efforts warranted to monitor isolated populations for viruses with pandemic potential.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3e048c8e2e6fa2c44c20f55e8819dc73