Back to Search
Start Over
Is There a Relationship Between Bovine Tuberculosis (bTB) Herd Breakdown Risk and Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis Status? An Investigation in bTB Chronically and Non-chronically Infected Herds
- Source :
- Frontiers in Veterinary Science, Vol 6 (2019), Frontiers in Veterinary Science
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- Frontiers Media SA, 2019.
-
Abstract
- Background: Bovine tuberculosis (bTB; Mycobacterium bovis) remains a significant problem in a number of countries, and is often found where M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP) is also present. In the United Kingdom, bTB has been difficult to eradicate despite long-term efforts. Co-infection has been proposed as one partial mechanism thwarting eradication.Methods: A retrospective case-control study of 4,500 cattle herds in Northern Ireland, where serological testing of cattle for MAP, was undertaken (2004–2015). Blood samples were ELISA tested for MAP; infection of M. bovis was identified in herds by the comparative tuberculin test (CTT) and through post-mortem evidence of infection. Case-herds were those experiencing a confirmed bTB breakdown; control-herds were not experiencing a breakdown episode at the time of MAP testing. A second model included additional testing data of feces samples (culture and PCR results) to better inform herd MAP status. Multi-level hierarchical models were developed, controlling for selected confounders. A sensitivity analysis of the effect of MAP sample numbers per event and the prior timing of tuberculin-testing was undertaken.Results: 45.2% (n = 250) of case observations and 36.0% (3,480) of control observations were positive to MAP by ELISA (45.8% and 36.4% when including ancillary fecal testing, respectively). Controlling for known confounders, the adjusted odds ratio (aOR) for this association was 1.339 (95%CI:1.085–1.652; including ancillary data aOR:1.356;95%CI:1.099–1.673). The size-effect of the association increased with the increasing number of samples per event used to assign herd MAP status (aOR:1.883 at >2 samples, to aOR:3.863 at >10 samples), however the estimated CI increased as N decreased. 41.7% of observations from chronic herds were MAP serology-positive and 32.2% from bTB free herds were MAP positive (aOR: 1.170; 95%ci: 0.481–2.849).Discussion: Cattle herds experiencing a bTB breakdown were associated with increased risk of having a positive MAP status. Chronic herds tended to exhibit higher risk of a positive MAP status than bTB free herds, however there was less support for this association when controlling for repeated measures and confounding. MAP co-infection may be playing a role in the success of bTB eradiation schemes, however further studies are required to understand the mechanisms and to definitively establish causation.
- Subjects :
- Veterinary medicine
Tuberculosis
040301 veterinary sciences
mycobacteria
Tuberculin
Paratuberculosis
infectious disease control
Serology
0403 veterinary science
03 medical and health sciences
co-infection
Medicine
Feces
Original Research
030304 developmental biology
bovine TB
0303 health sciences
Mycobacterium bovis
lcsh:Veterinary medicine
biology
General Veterinary
business.industry
veterinary epidemiology
04 agricultural and veterinary sciences
Odds ratio
biology.organism_classification
medicine.disease
Herd
lcsh:SF600-1100
Veterinary Science
business
Johne's disease
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 22971769
- Volume :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Frontiers in Veterinary Science
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6a2993487e2626096c974f5e2352d57e
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2019.00030