1. Context
Peste des petits ruminants (PPR) as 'small ruminants plague' is one of the leading and most lethal infectious viral diseases of small ruminants, caused by small ruminant morbillivirus otherwise known as PPR Virus (PPRV), belonging to the genus Morbillivirus in the Paramyxoviridae family (http://ictvonline.org/virusTaxonomy.asp). Highly contagious nature results in classifying as Transboundary Animal Disease by Office International des Epizooties. PPR also has high morbidity and mortality rates with a high number of outbreaks per year; therefore, a threat is to sustainable agricultural growth causing a severe socio-economic impact on the livestock industry, especially in developing and underdeveloped countries. Furthermore, PPR was first described in 1942 in the Republic Côte d'Ivoire in West Africa and then spread to more than 70 countries, such as Africa, the Middle East, the parts of Asia; in addition, the parts of Europe together have confirmed PPR affecting ~1.7 billion of the global sheep and goat population Balamurugan, Vinod Kumar ( 1 ), ( 2 ). Considering the importance of small ruminants in ensuring food security and socio-economic growth in many parts of the world, mainly in Africa and Asia by the direction of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) launched the PPR global eradication program (PPR-GEP) with the adoption of PPR Global Control and Eradication Strategy (GCES) for the global eradication of PPRV by 2030.
However, sheep and goats are primary hosts for PPRV due to their highly contagious nature and ability to cross-species barrier similar to other members of morbillivirus (Rinderpest virus, Measles virus) with the mechanism for adapting to new hosts. In the last few decades, an increase was in reports on PPRV inter-species transmission to unnatural hosts. Such unknown mechanism of PPRV’s propensity to transmit, expansion of susceptible hosts, and their epidemiological role raises concerns on the successful implementation of the PPR-GEP. Among the livestock animal, some reports are for confirmed PPRV infection with seroprevalence in large ruminants in Asia and Africa, among cattle, water buffalo, and camel largely reported ( 3 - 6 ). Other than unusual livestock (bovine and camel), PPR is extensively reported in various wildlife and the first natural infection of PPR in wild Dorcas gazelle was reported by Furley, Taylor ( 7 ). The huge fatality documented in Mongolian wildlife ( 8 ) and mountain ungulates from the Middle East, South, and East Asia exemplifies the impact of PPR on the wildlife population ( 9 - 12 ). As per the literature based on antibody and viral detection, African wildlife often seems exposed to PPRVdue to its large wildlife population density, compared to Asia ( 13 - 15 ).
Over the past few decades, the role of livestock and wildlife in PPR epidemiology is becoming clearer, with the majority of data supporting the effective disease transmission between livestock and wildlife with some gaps in knowledge ( 16 , 17 ). PPRV spillover from a domestic source was observed in Tanzania's Serengeti habitat, with greater antibody prevalence in animals near cattle and without clinical symptoms or death ( 8 , 9 , 15 ). Furthermore, PPRV circulation in animals, even if only for a short time, can contribute to virus persistence in multi-host systems increase virus propagation, and affect the intervention program ( 18 ). The current study aimed to conduct a systematic meta-analysis to determine the evidence of PPRV infection in atypical hosts (bovine and camel) and wildlife.
2. Evidence Acquisition
2.1. Literature Search Strategy
Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) guidelines of Cochran collaborations were used for systematic review and subsequently meta-analysis ( 19 - 21 ). A literature survey was systematically conducted to collect all relevant literature on the prevalence of PPRV in the bovine, camel, and wildlife. The published information was collected from the various electronic web database engines, including PubMed (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/), Scopus (www.scopus.com), ScienceDirect (https://www.sciencedirect.com/), and Google Scholars (https://scholar.google.com/). Some of the articles were added by the authors using hand-searching of references from the reviewed materials. Initial search string resulted in 552 articles from January 2001 to October 2021 using the different combinations of keywords "Prevalence OR Incidence OR Frequency OR Detection OR Occurrence OR Identification OR Isolation OR Characterization OR Investigation OR Survey OR Rate" AND "PPR OR Peste des petits ruminants OR Goat plague OR Kata OR ovine rinderpest OR Caprine rinderpest" AND "Large Ruminant OR Bovine OR Cattle OR Buffalo OR Camel Or Camelus OR Wild OR Wildlife OR feral Or unnatural host OR unusual host" (Table S1). Rayyan QCRI (the systematic reviews web app) was used for systematic reviews and compilations ( 21 ). Initially, a blind screening was performed by the two investigators independently and followed by resolving the conflict in the software (Rayyan QCRI). The reference management software Zotero desktop (version 5.0.96.3) was used to manage full articles and selected references. Furthermore, country and continent-wise distribution of PPR in atypical hosts and wildlife were depicted in the map using QGIS software (version 3.20.1).
2.2. Study Selection and Data Extraction
The schematic representation of the systematic review on the prevalence of PPR was depicted in figure 1. Out of 552 studies compiled during the literature search from the databases and duplicated entries, 153 articles were removed by screening titles and citation details. In the preliminary screening phase, studies were excluded based on irrelevance (n=357) (i.e., non-PPR study, non-bovine/camel/wildlife, lack of temporal and spatial information, lack of full text, article related to only sheep or goat, experimental trial, and articles in other languages than English). In total, seven articles were removed based on full-text screening due to lack of data on the sample tested, the test used, and species tested. Subsequently, three relevant articles were identified through a reference search based on the author's knowledge without an appearance in the search list. Accordingly, 48 studies were selected for the full-text reviews and subjected to the quality of bias assessment. Finally, a total of seven articles were used for the meta-analysis and the determinants, such as the author, publication year, region, and species (wild, bovine, and camel); moreover, region and number of the sample tested, the number of positive samples, and tests used for the analysis were extracted from the selected articles.
2.3. Quality Assessment of Studies
The quality of the studies was assessed by two investigators independently, and the investigator used seven items with a 5-point Likert scale to judge the quality of each research paper. The maximum score of 5 indicates a likely and unlikely article. The scores of the investigators were further used to calculate the coefficient of the validity with the Aiken value ( 64 - 66 ).
2.4. Meta-Analysis
Meta-analysis was conducted using R open-source scripting software (Comprehensive R Archive Network; version 3.2.5) and the R package used was "meta" as reported earlier ( 67 ). The graphical representation of the effect size was done through a forest plot or confidence interval plot. In a meta-analysis, predominantly fixed effect and random effect models were used based on the variation in the studies and heterogeneity [I2] values. The random-effect model was used when the heterogeneity among the studies was statistically significant in combining with inconsistency indices. The heterogeneity of the studies was calculated using Cochran's Q statistic, Tau square, H-value, and P-values obtained, and results are given in the last line of the forest plot ( 21 , 64 ).
Meta-regression was conducted to analyze the influence of included studies and estimate variation in the studies ( 68 ). To predict the effect of a hypothesized moderator, a weighted linear regression model was applied in which the effect size (samples) was regressed onto the moderator ( 67 , 69 ). The moderators in univariate meta-regression were the test, geographic region, years, species, and total. The variables with P<0.05 in univariate meta-regression were used for further subgroup analysis, and only factors significant at P≤0.05 were retained in the final model. Meta-regression reduces the number of tests and estimations; therefore, the power of analysis is greater and the probability of false-positives findings is reduced ( 68 ).
Subgroup analysis was conducted to assess the heterogeneity in the region (Asia and Africa), sample size, and the test included along with species ( 69 ). Sensitivity analysis was performed to identify the studies contributing to overall heterogeneity and measure the robustness of meta-analysis findings. The extent of publication bias in the selected studies was measured and demonstrated in a funnel plot with the Y-axis representing the standard error of each study and the X-axis representing the arcsine transformation of the proportion of the study ( 69 ).
3. Results
3.1. Information on the Included Studies and Quality of Bias Assessment
Out of 552 studies, a total of 48 studies (Table 1) were selected for full-text reviews and subjected to the quality of bias assessment. For the selection of articles, inter-rater agreement and consensus using Aiken's V-value index were performed to reduce bias. Additionally, the quality of the studies was assessed based on the score given by the two independent authors to seven items using the Likert scale. Based on the ratings calculated, Aiken's V-value for all the studies was more than 0.75, indicating the acceptable quality of the study. Finally, 37 articles were selected for meta-analysis ( 4 , 8 , 10 , 14 , 28 - 61 ) (Table 1) with the details presented in the PRISMA flow chart (figure 1). The prevalence of PPRV was calculated using a total sample size of 12,337 out of which Bovine alone contributed to 7,962 cases followed by camel (n=3,577) and wildlife (n=798).
Study | Year | Country | Continent | Animal | Species | Genus Species |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
*Roger, Yesus ( 22 ) | 1995 | Ethiopia | Africa | *Camel | Camel | Camelus dromedarius |
*Haroun, Hajer ( 23 ) | 2002 | Sudan | Africa | *Camel | Camel | Camelus dromedarius |
United Arab Emirates | Asia | Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus | ||
Ozkul, Akca ( 24 ) | 1999-2000 | Turkey | Asia | Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
*Ogunsanmi, Awe ( 25 ) | Nil | Nigeria | Africa | *Wildlife | African grey duiker | Sylvicapra grimmia |
Elzein, Housawi ( 26 ) | 2002 | Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) | Asia | Wildlife | Dorcas gazelles | Gazella dorcus |
Gazella thomsoni | Thomsons gazelles | |||||
*Lundervold, Milner-Gulland ( 27 ) | 1997-1998 | Kazakhstan | Asia | *Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
*Haque, Habib ( 28 ) | 1997-1998 | Bangladesh | Asia | *Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
*Abraham, Sintayehu ( 29 ) | 2001 | Ethiopia | Africa | *Camel | Camel | Camelus dromedarius |
*Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus | ||||
Couacy-Hymann, Bodjo ( 13 ) | 2005 | Côte d'Ivoire | Africa | Wildlife | African buffalo | Syncerus caffer |
Defassa waterbuck | Kobus defassa | |||||
Khan, Siddique ( 30 ) | 2008 | Pakistan | Asia | Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
Buffalo | Bubalus bubalis | |||||
*Maillard, Van ( 31 ) | Nil | Vietnam | Asia | *Bovine | Buffalo | Bubalus bubalis |
Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus | |||||
*Rashid, Asim ( 32 ) | Nil | Pakistan | Asia | *Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
*Albayrak and Gur ( 33 ) | 2009 | Turkey | Asia | *Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
*Gur and Albayrak ( 34 ) | 2010 | Turkey | Asia | *Wildlife | Goitered gazella | Gazella subgutturosa |
*Kwiatek, Ali ( 35 ) | 2000-2009 | Sudan | Africa | *Camel | Camel | Camelus dromedarius |
*Bao, Wang ( 36 ) | 2007-2008 | China | Asia | *Wildlife | Bharals | Pseudois nayaur |
*Rajneesh, Kataria ( 37 ) | Nil | India | Asia | *Camel | Camel | Camelus dromedarius |
*Balamurugan, Krishnamoorthy ( 3 ) | 2009-2010 | India | Asia | *Bovine | Buffalo | Bubalus bubalis |
Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus | |||||
Hoffmann, Wiesner ( 38 ) | 2010-2011 | Iraq | Asia | Wildlife | Wild goat | Capra aegagrus |
Balamurugan, Krishnamoorthy ( 39 ) | 2012 | India | Asia | Wildlife | Lion | Panthera leo persica |
*Balamurugan, Krishnamoorthy ( 39 ) | 2011 | India | Asia | *Bovine | Buffalo | Bubalus bubalis |
Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus | |||||
*Lembo, Oura ( 40 ) | 2011 | Tanzania | Africa | *Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
El-Dakhly ( 41 ) | Nil | Libya | Africa | Camel | Camel | Camelus dromedarius |
Abdul-Dahiru, Baba ( 42 ) | Nil | Nigeria | Africa | Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
Camel | Camel | Camelus dromedarius | ||||
*Mahapatra, Sayalel ( 15 ) | 2014 | Tanzania | Africa | *Wildlife | African buffalo | Syncerus caffer |
Grant’s gazelle | Nanger granti | |||||
Wildebeest | Connochaetes gnou | |||||
Impala | Aepyceros melampus | |||||
*Woma, Kalla ( 43 ) | 2014 | Nigeria | Africa | *Camel | Camel | Camelus dromedarius |
*Saeed, Ali ( 44 ) | 2002-2011 | Sudan | Africa | *Camel | Camel | Camelus dromedarius |
*Li, Li ( 10 ) | 2013-2016 | China | Asia | *Wildlife | Argali | Ovis ammon |
Ibex | Capra ibex sibirica | |||||
Goitered gazella | Gazella subgutturosa | |||||
*Abubakar, Mahapatra ( 45 ) | 2015 | Pakistan | Asia | *Bovine | Buffalo | Bubalus bubalis |
Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus | |||||
*Intisar, Ali ( 46 ) | 2008-2012 | Sudan | Africa | Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
*Wildlife | Dorcas gazelles | Gazella dorcus | ||||
*Camel | Camel | Camelus dromedarius | ||||
*Jaisree, Aravindhbabu ( 47 ) | Nil | India | Asia | *Wildlife | Chowsingha | Tetracerus quadricornis |
*Zhou, Wang ( 48 ) | 2016 | China | Asia | *Wildlife | Water deer | Hydropotes inermis |
Ali, Osman ( 49 ) | 2015-2016 | Sudan | Asia | Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
Bello, Kazeem ( 50 ) | Nil | Nigeria | Africa | Camel | Camel | Camelus dromedarius |
*Omani, Gitao ( 51 ) | 2018 | Kenya | Africa | *Camel | Camel | Camelus dromedarius |
*Asil, Ludlow ( 52 ) | 2018 | Sudan | Africa | *Wildlife | Dorcas gazelles | Gazella dorcus |
*Li, Cao ( 53 ) | 2018 | China | Asia | *Wildlife | Przewalski's gazelle | Procapra przewalskii |
*Herzog, de Glanville ( 54 ) | 2016 | Tanzania | Africa | *Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
*Vj, Gitao ( 55 ) | Nil | Kenya | Africa | *Camel | Camel | Camelus dromedarius |
*Agga, Raboisson ( 56 ) | 2005-2006 | Ethiopia | Africa | *Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
Hekal, Al-Gaabary ( 57 ) | 2016-2018 | Sudan | Africa | Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
*Abubakar, Sattorov ( 58 ) | 2014 | Pakistan | Asia | *Bovine | Yak | Bos grunniens |
*Pruvot, Fine ( 8 ) | 2017 | Mongolia | Asia | *Wildlife | Ibex | Capra ibex |
Goitered gazella | Gazella subgutturosa | |||||
Saiga antelope | Saiga tatarica | |||||
*Fernandez Aguilar, Mahapatra ( 59 ) | 2013-2017 | Sudan | Africa | *Wildlife | Elephant | Loxodonta africana |
Tiang | Damaliscus lunatus tiang | |||||
Uganda | Africa | African buffalo | Syncerus caffer | |||
Uganda kob | Kobus kob thomasi | |||||
*Cosseddu, Doumbia ( 60 ) | 2013 | Mauritania | Africa | Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
*Liu, Liu ( 61 ) | 2021 | China | Asia | Wildlife | Alpacas | Vicugna pacos |
*Jones, Mahapatra ( 62 ) | 2015-2016 | Tanzania | Africa | Wildlife | Kongoni | Alcelaphus buselaphus |
Grant’s gazelle | Nanger granti | |||||
African buffalo | Syncerus caffer | |||||
Topi | Damaliscus lunatus | |||||
Kenya | Africa | |||||
African buffalo | Syncerus caffer | |||||
Wildebeest | Connochaetes gnou | |||||
Grant’s gazelle | Nanger granti | |||||
Impala | Aepyceros melampus | |||||
Thomsons gazelles | Gazella thomsoni | |||||
Warthog | Phacochoerus africanus | |||||
Gerenuk | Litocranius walleri | |||||
*Prajapati, Shrestha ( 63 ) | 2021 | Nepal | Asia | Bovine | Cattle | Bos primigenius taurus |
* Study and animal included in the meta-analysis after exclusion of studies due to inter-rater disagreement |
3.2 Publication Bias
Publication bias is a critical problem in systematic review and meta-analysis, affecting the validity and generalization of conclusions ( 70 ). In this study, funnel plot-based methods include a visual examination of a funnel plot, regression, and rank test used to assess publication bias. A funnel plot was plotted with arcsine transformation proportion in the X-axis and standard error in Y-axis. The arcsine-based transformation has the important advantage of stabilizing variance ( 70 ) which is likely the main reason included in our study. In figure 2, most of the studies were scattered and a few of the studies fall into the funnel, showing the publication bias. Moreover, the presence of asymmetry in the funnel plot was tested using Begg's rank correlation test and Egger's regression test. To deal with the presence of publication bias, the meta-regression was employed with sample size as the risk of bias factor, proving the non-significance (P>0.05) nullifying the effect of publication bias on the study.
3.3. Meta-Regression to Identify the Factors Affecting the Heterogeneity
Univariate meta-regression was used to identify potential covariates likely the magnitude and direction of the overall estimate of heterogeneity. The result of the meta-regression (Table 2) revealed that detection techniques had a significant impact on the overall heterogeneity at a 5% level. Variables, such as test, species, sample sizes, and year were statistically significant, and the estimated results revealed that the subgroup analysis and sensitivity analysis were required for further fine-tuning of prevalence rates of PPR.
Predictors | Estimate | SE | z value | τ2 | I2 (%) | H2 | R2 (%) | Qm | P- Value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Region | 0.45 | 0.07 | 6.19 | 0.10 | 99.11 | 112.59 | 0.00 | 0.99 | 0.3192 |
Test | 0.29 | 0.16 | 1.76 | 0.05 | 97.87 | 46.86 | 45.89 | 40.53 | 0.0001*** |
Species | 0.33 | 0.07 | 4.66 | 0.07 | 98.71 | 77.62 | 27.31 | 17.28 | 0.0002*** |
Sample Size | 0.56 | 0.06 | 9.16 | 0.09 | 98.90 | 90.76 | 5.22 | 3.72 | 0.0538 |
Year | -38.99 | 17.15 | -2.27 | 0.08 | 98.97 | 97.09 | 9.06 | 5.30 | 0.0214* |
Where* indicates the 5% level of significance, *** 0.1% level of significance |
3.4. Subgroup and Sensitivity Analysis
Subgroup analysis was conducted for the covariates, such as antigen/antibody test with a level of sample size further based on region and animal group due to the effect on heterogeneity (Table 3). Subgroup analysis of antigen/antibody test revealed the percentage prevalence of 90% with I2 = 88% and τ2= 0.1882 (95% CI: 0.67-1.0) in PCR assay, followed by antibody prevalence of 25.71% (figure 3).
Group | Variables | No. of study | No. of animal sampled | No. of positive animal | Pooled estimate % | 95% CI | Heterogeneity chi-squared (τ 2) | I2% | P-value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Continent | Africa | 18 | 8811 | 1025 | 20 | 11-30 | 0.0684 | 98 | <0.01 |
Asia | 19 | 3526 | 527 | 30 | 14- 49 | 0.1599 | 95 | <0.01 | |
Animal | Bovine | 14 | 7962 | 900 | 11 | 8-14 | 0.0090 | 94 | <0.01 |
Camel | 10 | 3577 | 425 | 15 | 4-31 | 0.0936 | 99 | <0.01 | |
Estimate Livestock (Bovine and camel) | 23 | 11539 | 1325 | 13 | 8-19 | 0.0403 | 98 | <0.01 | |
Wildlife | 15 | 798 | 227 | 52 | 30-74 | 0.1568 | 91 | <0.01 | |
Study years | Livestock in 2001-2010 | 10 | 3426 | 336 | 15 | 5-28 | 0.0642 | 97 | <0.01 |
Wildlife in 2001-2010 | 3 | 124 | 17 | 24 | 2-61 | 0.0952 | 74 | <0.02 | |
Estimate livestock and wildlife 2001-2010 | 13 | 3550 | 353 | 16 | 7-27 | 0.0601 | 97 | <0.01 | |
Livestock in 2011-2021 | 13 | 8113 | 989 | 12 | 7-19 | 0.0272 | 98 | < 0.01 | |
Wildlife in 2011-2021 | 12 | 674 | 210 | 60 | 35-83 | 0.1580 | 92 | < 0.01 | |
Estimate livestock and wildlife 2011-2021 | 24 | 8787 | 1199 | 29 | 16-44 | 0.1298 | 97 | <0.01 | |
Overall estimate | 37 | 12337 | 1552 | 24 | 15- 33 | 0.1005 | 97 | <0.01 |
3.5. Region and Animal Species Reported
A total of 37 articles covering 16 countries in two continents (Asia and Africa) were included in this study. The number of articles published from African countries was: Ethiopia ( 3 ), Kenya ( 3 ), Mauritania ( 1 ), Nigeria ( 2 ), Sudan ( 6 ), Tanzania ( 4 ), Uganda ( 1 ), and from Asian countries was Bangladesh ( 1 ), China ( 5 ), India ( 4 ), Kazakhstan ( 1 ), Mongolia ( 1 ), Nepal ( 1 ), Pakistan ( 3 ), Turkey ( 2 ), and Vietnam ( 1 ) from 2001 to 2021 (Table 1 and Figure 4A). Totally, 29 animal species among which livestock species included in the study, were Cattle (Bos primigenius taurus), Water Buffalo (Bubalus bubalis), Yak (Bos grunniens), and Camel (Camelus dromedarius), and among the wildlife, African buffalo (Syncerus caffer), African grey duiker (Sylvicapra grimmia), Alpacas (Vicugna pacos), Argali (Ovis ammon), Bharals (Pseudois nayaur), Chowsingha (Tetracerus quadricornis), Dorcas gazelles (Gazella dorcus), Elephant (Loxodonta africana), Gerenuk (Litocranius walleri), Goitered gazella (Gazella subgutturosa), Grant's gazelle (Nanger granti), Ibex (Capra ibex and Capra ibex sibirica), Impala (Aepyceros melampus), Kongoni (Alcelaphus buselaphus), Lion (Panthera leo persica), Przewalski's gazelle (Procapra przewalskii), Saiga antelope (Saiga tatarica), Thomsons gazelles (Gazella thomsoni), Tiang (Damaliscus lunatus tiang), Topi (Damaliscus lunatus), Uganda kob (Kobus kob thomasi), Warthog (Phacochoerus africanus), Water deer (Hydropotes inermis), and Wildebeest (Connochaetes gnou) (Table 1 and Figure 4).
3.6. Prevalence Estimates
The random effect meta-analysis of bovine, camel, and wildlife animals showed that pooled prevalence of PPR was 24% (95% CI: 15-33) with heterogeneity I2 =97%, τ2=0.1005, P<0.01 (Table 3, Figure 5). Furthermore, in the case of the specific region, the studies showed that the prevalence of PPRV in Asia was 30% (95% CI: 0.14-0.49) followed by Africa with 20% (95% CI: 0.11-0.30) (Figures 6A and S1). Animal species category wise pooled prevalence showed 11% (95% CI: 8-14) for bovine (cattle and buffaloes), 15% (95% CI: 4-31) for camel, and 52% (95% CI: 30-74) for wildlife (Figure 7). However, the pooled prevalence of livestock (bovine and camel combined) was 13% (Figure S2). Furthermore, the articles were sub grouped into the studied period (2001-2010 and 2011-2021) to understand the prevalence of PPR in the last two decades (Figures S3 and S4). From 2001 to 2010, the estimated prevalence was 15% (95% CI: 5-28) and 24% (95% CI: 2-61) for livestock and wildlife, respectively, with an overall estimated pooled prevalence of 16% (95% CI: 7-27) during 2001-2010. Similarly, from 2011 to 2021, the prevalence was 12% (95% CI: 7-19) and 60% (95% CI: 35-83) for livestock and wildlife, respectively, and overall estimate pooled prevalence showed 29% (95% CI: 16-44) during 2010-2021.
4. Conclusions
Contagious viral infection of PPRV has been reported in different parts of the world, including Asia, Africa, and some parts of Europe ( 8 - 12 ). However, for the meta-analysis, only 37 articles were selected from 48 eligible articles due to inter-rater disagreement. All 48 articles on bovine, camel, and wildlife from 2001 to 2021 were listed in table 1. An article published in 2001 by Roger, Yesus ( 22 ) based on the study conducted in 1995 was also included, and the systemic review and meta-analysis summarize the prevalence of PPR in bovine, camels, and wildlife based on the population size (n=12,337). An earlier meta-analysis study by Ahaduzzaman ( 71 ) using the random-effect model on PPR prevalence in sheep and goats from 34 countries shows an overall estimated pooled prevalence of 39.46% so that all data included in the study belonged to Asia and Africa with the prevalence of 38.63% and 40.16%, respectively. In the present study, the overall estimated pooled prevalence was 24% in three groups of unnatural hosts bovine, camel, and wildlife, which is lower than the prevalence of the primary host sheep and goat observed by Ahaduzzaman ( 71 ). The prevalence in bovine, camel, and wildlife was significantly higher in Asia (30%) and Africa (20%) (Table 3, Figures 6A and S1), compared to sheep and goats observed by Ahaduzzaman ( 71 ).
The present study under PCR assay grouping had I2=91% and τ2=0.2286 with a high prevalence of 74% (95 % CI: 39-97) (Figure 3). The chance of positivity was attributed to the low sample size as the outbreak samples were collected only in case of the onset of animal deaths and analyzed by RT-PCR. Furthermore, subgroup analyses of the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay were classified by PPRV antigen and antibody detection with species, continents, with sample size above or below the median for better understanding. The result of antibody detection had a wide range of prevalence from 2 % above-median in camels from Africa to 30% below-median in the wildlife of Africa.
PPR in sheep and goats is reported from more than 70 countries, mostly of African and Asian origin (Figure 6B) ( 1 , 71 ). In the present review, PPR in the atypical/unnatural hosts (bovine, camel) and wildlife were observed in 22 countries from Africa ( 9 ) and Asia ( 13 ) (Table 1, Figure 4); however, the pooled prevalence was estimated for only 16 countries in the present meta-analysis. Only three enzootic countries, such as Nigeria, Sudan, and India were reported for all three groups of animals (bovine, camel, and wildlife) in the study period (Figure 6B). Moreover, Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Kazakhstan, Libya, Mauritania, Nepal, Pakistan, and United Arab Emirates (UAE) were only reported in the atypical hosts (bovine and camel), and Côte d'Ivoire, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Mongolia, China, and Uganda were reported only wildlife (Table 1, Figure 6B). Evidence of PPRV was in bovine in Vietnam without any official OIE reports on the prevalence of PPR in sheep and goats. Apart from these countries listed in this review, other reports conducted to detect the PPRV in wildlife were in Pakistan ( 72 ), Kurdistan, Iran ( 11 , 38 ), UAE ( 73 ), and Egypt ( 74 ) as reviewed earlier ( 9 , 12 ). Out of 70 countries with PPR in sheep and goats, only about 22 countries (31%) studied or reported the prevalence of PPR in atypical and wildlife hosts, showing a huge knowledge gap in understanding the role of these animals in the PPR spread and transmission.
In the present study, estimated pooled prevalence rates of 11%, 15%, and 52% were observed for bovine, camel, and wildlife, respectively. Prevalence in wildlife was higher than that in the bovine and camel, leading to concerns; however, the study population size of the wildlife was only 798, compared to 7,962 in bovine and 3,577 in camel as these low numbers are attributed to the lack of systematic study, limiting to outbreaks responses and lack of reporting in the wild setup.
A significant difference was also observed between the number of studies and prevalence of PPR in wildlife in two decades, 24% (3 studies) in 2001-2010 and 60% (12 studies) in 2011-2021 (Table 3). A cumulative time-scale map of the reported countries for PPR in the atypical hosts (bovine and camel) and wildlife during 2001-2021 is shown in figures 8A and B, indicating the significance of wildlife recognized in recent years and the increasing frequency of PPR in wildlife.
Furthermore, overall estimated prevalence rates of 11% and 15% were observed in bovine and camel, respectively. Large ruminants, such as cattle, water buffalo, and yaks are reported for seroconversion to PPRV in Asia and Africa; however, Govindarajan, Koteeswaran ( 5 ) observed rare clinical infection with high case fatality (96%) in bovine with fever, conjunctival congestion, hypersalivation, and depression. Experimental clinical infection was established in buffalo calves, whereas cattle were susceptible without clinical signs ( 75 , 76 ). The cattle are also considered dead-end hosts for PPRV as no evidence of virus shedding was in body secretion and excretions ( 6 , 56 ); however, transmission by water buffalo cannot be ruled out ( 5 , 6 ). Clinical PPRV infection and seroconversion in camels are frequently reported from Africa and Asia. Here, clinical signs have been similar to sheep and goats ( 6 , 77 , 78 ), and clinical signs include fever, diarrhea, conjunctivitis with ocular discharges, loss of body condition, and general weakness, resembling PPR in small ruminants consequently. Additionally, evidence supporting viral shedding is considered in faces and nasal discharges. It should be noted that the possible risk of camel transmission needs more studies. Both bovine and camel PPRV infections are attributed to the cohabitation of sheep and goats ( 6 ).
Hamdy and Dardiri ( 79 ) first reported in 1976 that wild ruminants were also sensitive to PPRV since most reports of PPRV-related deaths focused on wild ruminants, such as bharals, wild goats, dorcas gazelles, bubal hartebeests, and waterbucks ( 12 , 80 ). Before 2001, PPR was reported in cattle, water buffalo, camel, and in a few wildlife species, including Gazella dorcass (Dorcas gazelles), Nubian ibex (Capra nubiana), White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), Asinus (Equus asinus), Gemsbok (Oryx gazella), Laristan sheep (Ovis gmelina), and Nilgai (Boselaphus tragocamelus) ( 6 , 7 , 9 , 12 , 79 , 81 ).
Since 2001, a drastic increase has been in the reports of atypical hosts and wildlife, and around 25 new species of animals are reported, mostly in the wildlife (Figure 4B). PPR prevalence of 25 wildlife species was covered in the present systematic review in Asia and Africa (Figure 4A) that include Aepyceros melampus ( 15 ), Alcelaphus buselaphus ( 62 , 82 ), Capra ibex ( 8 , 12 ), Connochaetes spp. ( 15 ), Damaliscus lunatus tiang ( 59 ), Defassa waterbuck ( 13 ), Eudorcas thomsonii, Phacochoerus africanus Litocranius walleri ( 62 ), Gazella subgutturosa ( 10 , 26 , 34 ), Gazella thomsoni ( 34 ), Kobus kob leucotis, Kobus kob thomasi, Loxodonta africana ( 59 ), Nanger granti ( 15 , 62 ), Ovis ammon ( 10 ), Panthera leo persica ( 3 ), Procapra przewalskii ( 53 ), Saiga tatarica ( 8 ), Syncerus caffer ( 40 ), Vicugna pacos ( 61 ), Capra aegagrus ( 38 ), Hydropotes inermis ( 48 ), Sylvicapra grimmia ( 25 ), and Tetracerus quadricornis ( 47 ). Apart from these, PPR is mentioned in other wildlife species, including Gazella gazella cora (Arabian mountain gazelle), Antidorcas marsupialis (Springbuck), Gazella gazella (Arabian gazelle), Ammotragus lervia (Barbary), Tragelaphus scriptus (Bushbuck), Capra falconeri (Afghan Markhor goat) ( 73 ), and Ovis orientalis (wild sheep) ( 11 ) without any clear data regarding animal prevalence in these reports. Some pieces of evidence of PPRV infection were lions ( 3 ) and elephants ( 59 ) in wildlife from Asia and Africa, respectively. The frequency of PPR reporting in new hosts increased over the years and the year-wise species diversity and detection of new hosts are shown in Figure 4B. Sudan, Kenya, and Tanzania were the countries with the highest species diversity, and due to high animal density, most of the enzootic regions of Asia and Africa are likely to have a higher risk of PPR. Moreover, because of a vast host range and heterogeneities in different host ranges and animal population density, the difference in susceptibility of the host to PPRV infection, disease control, and eradication seem cumbersome. As a result, the strategies employed cannot solely rely on or be limited to the vaccination of sheep and goats.
In the GCES of the "Global Program-Transboundary Animal Diseases" program, the focus is considered vital on the prevention of cross-species and transmission from the typical hosts to unnatural hosts, including wildlife through strengthened disease surveillance, coupled with appropriate diagnostics and vaccination. More research on the pathogenesis of PPR in wildlife species is needed to explain this phenomenon; additionally, the function of infective strains, migration, stress, co-infections, environmental conditions, and other ecological elements of the disease must be thoroughly examined. However, wild ruminants can sustain and bridge viruses between wildlife and livestock ( 80 ), thereby eradicating PPRV may be hindered. For effective eradication, the program should focus on understanding the transmission of PPRV among the atypical hosts/wildlife. Modern molecular tools should also understand virus virulence, an adapted ability for diverse hosts ( 80 ). The limitation of the present analysis is that most of the studies on unnatural hosts, such as large ruminants and wildlife, were based on few samples, leading to high positivity. The systematic review was conducted on articles only from countries from Africa and Asia within the search range. Demographic characteristics (age, gender) and risk factors were also absent or not uniform in the selected articles. The review excluded some kinds of articles, including non-English, unpublished articles, retro perspective, method-validation articles, and also experimental-trial results. Finally, heterogeneity in models was significant that showed other ignored factors might have substantial effects.
To the best of our knowledge, this paper is the first study to estimate the prevalence of PPR among unusual hosts (bovine, camel) and wildlife using systematic review and meta-analysis. The estimated pooled prevalence was more high and different between the two continents, which was contrary to observation on sheep and goats in Asia than Africa. The results show that the host range is widening over time and the frequency of discovery of new hosts has increased in recent years; moreover, the screening tests for PPR, effective preventive, and control measures should be routinely conducted in all susceptible animals (livestock and wildlife) in regions with a high disease prevalence to control the spill-over outbreaks. The outbreak in unnatural hosts may cause morbidity and mortality in economically important livestock and be also fatal to the wildlife populations in the sanctuaries and national parks. Controlling disease transmission to other unnatural hosts from sheep and goats is as much important as in sheep and goats. Furthermore, epidemiological surveillance is needed for estimating the disease burden and its elimination in many regions, in which the virus may be circulating in multiple hosts. Additionally, the contributing factors to the prevalence heterogeneity should be handled suitably in the survey for an accurate estimate. The findings of the current study are significant as Asia and Africa are responsible for the majority of the world's bovine, camel, and wildlife populations. Due to human activities and global climate change, wildlife has less access to food and water, resulting in poor nutritional status and habitat disturbance, increasing the probability of wildlife-livestock interactions. This interaction either directly or indirectly via other livestock animal persistence transmission can jeopardize the ongoing control program in the sheep and goat population. Therefore, surveillance mechanisms should be considered at the interface between the livestock and wildlife to identify the spillover mechanism of the PPRV infection. Furthermore, the surveillance should be strengthened to ensure mild clinical cases as PPR reported in sheep and goat vaccinated regions (due to the impact of vaccination, changing pattern of the disease in sheep and goats). Syndromic surveillance should be also used for knowing the status of clinical diseases, if any in the interface, and identifying the undetected mild cases during the PPR control and eradication program.
Authors' Contribution
S. S. K. carried out the literature search, analysis of data, and wrote the rough draft of the manuscript. K. V. K. and P. P. B. interpreted the data, wrote the draft, and prepared the GIS map, figures, and tables. S. S. K., B. A. P., and A. N. analyzed the data and carried out the meta-analysis in R software. K. P. S. designed, analyzed, and interpreted the data. BRS provided guidance and support to carry out the research. V. B. designed and conceptualized the idea, interpreted the data, rewritten the draft, and edited the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final edited manuscript.
Conflict of Interest
The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
Acknowledgement
The authors wish to thank the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR), New Delhi, India, and the ICAR-NIVEDI, Bengaluru, India for constant support and encouragement. The authors also thank the ICAR-NIVEDI staff for their continuous support and timely help to execute this systematic review and meta-analysis study.
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