字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 >> Welcome and thank you for standing by. At this time, all participant lines are in the listen only mode. After today's presentations, you'll have the opportunity to ask questions, and you may do so over the phone by pressing star then one at that time. Today's conference call is being recorded. If you have any objections to this, please disconnect. Now, I would like to turn the call over to your host for today, Ms. Ria Ghai. Ms. Ghai, you may begin. >> Thanks so much, Brad. Good afternoon everyone. My name's Ria Ghai, and I work at the One Health office of the National Center of Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases at the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. On behalf of the One Health office, I'm pleased to welcome you to the monthly Zoonoses and One Health Update call for today, February 5th, 2020. ZOHU calls content is directed to epidemiologists, laboratorians, scientists, physicians, nurses, veterinarians, animal health officials and other public health professionals at the federal, state and local levels. Please be aware that CDC has no control over who participates on this conference call. Therefore, please exercise discretion on sensitive content and material, as confidentiality during these calls cannot be guaranteed. Today's call is being recorded, so if you have any objections, you may disconnect. Detailed instructions for obtaining free continuing education are available on our website and will be given at the end of the call. These presentations will not include any discussion of the unlabeled of a product or a product under investigational use. The planning committee reviewed content to ensure there is no bias. CDC did not accept commercial support for this activity. CDC, our planners, presenters and their spouses or partners disclosed that they have no financial interests or other relationships with the manufacturers of commercial products, suppliers of commercial services or commercial supporters. Before we begin today's presentation, Colin Basler, a veterinarian epidemiologist with CDC's National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases will share some news and updates. Colin, please go ahead. >> Thanks, Ria. Hi everyone. Thanks for joining us for today's ZOHU call, and welcome to our new participants. The ZOHU call audience continues to grow with subscribers representing professionals from government, nongovernment organizations, industry and academia, including students. We appreciate your help spreading the word about the ZOHU call. Please continue to share the ZOHU call website link with your colleagues from human, animal, environment and other relevant sectors. The site includes links to past call recordings, information on free continuing education for a variety of professionals and a link to subscribe to the ZOHU call email list. To begin today's call, I'd like to share some highlights from the One Health News from CDC included in today's ZOHU call email newsletter. CDC's latest antibiotic resistance investments map is now available. And the United Nations has declared 2020 the international year of plant health. Some upcoming conferences include two here in Atlanta. The 2020 Inform Conference will be from March 9th through the 12th, and the 2020 Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS) Conference will be from May 4th through 7th. Applications are being accepted for the David J. Sencer Scholarship to attend the EIS conference. We've shared links to recent publications on several topics including: pool code updates and use of the model aquatic health code in the local jurisdictions; rabies outbreak in captive big brown bats used in white-nose syndrome vaccine trials; and the AVMA guidelines for the euthanasia of animals, the 2020 edition, has just been published. Recent publications in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report of interest include Candida auris isolates resistant to three classes of antifungal medications, New York, 2019. Notes from the field about the 2019 multistate outbreak of Eastern equine encephalitis virus. And a third publication that just went live a few minutes ago, the MMWR on the initial public health response and interim guidance for the 2019 novel coronavirus outbreak, United States, December 31st, 2019 to February 4th, 2020. Regarding outbreaks, CDC is closely monitoring an outbreak of respiratory illness called by a novel coronavirus first identified in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China. Please see CDC's website for more information, travel recommendations and resources. A new outbreak of salmonella infections list to small pet turtles has been posted. And updates for outbreaks of E. coli infections linked to romaine lettuce and Fresh Express Sunflower Crips Chopped Salad Kits have also been posted. A selected list of ongoing and past U.S. outbreaks of zoonotic diseases, as well as information on staying safe and healthy around animals, is available on CDC's healthy pets, healthy people website. The complete CDC current outbreak list, including foodborne outbreaks is available at CDC.gov/outbreaks. As always, if you would like for us to share news from your organization or if you want to suggest presentation topics or volunteer to present, please contact us at ZOHUcall@CDC.gov. Again, thank you for supporting the ZOHU call and for joining us today. We've got an exciting lineup of speakers and topics, and I'll now turn the call back over to Ria. >> Thanks so much, Colin. Today's presentations will address one or more of the following objectives. Describe two key points from each presentation. To describe how a multisectoral One Health approach can be applied to the presentation topics. To identify an implication for animal and human health. To identify a One Health approach strategy for prevention, detection or response to public health threats. Or finally, to identify two new resources from CDC partners. Questions for all presenters will be taken at the end of the call. Please call 1-800-857-9665 and enter participant passcode 6236326. Then press star one and give the operator your name and affiliation. Please name the presenter or topic at the beginning of each question. You'll find resources and links for all presentations on our website an in today's ZOHU call email. I'm now excited to announce our first presentation which is called Ticks, Tortoises and Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in the Mojave Desert which will be given by Molly June Bechtel. Molly, please go ahead and begin when you're ready. >> Thank you. So, today I'm going to talk about a very understudied relationship between a vector and its host, the desert tortoise, in the Mojave Desert. I'm going to start by giving some background on the Mojave Desert tortoise. The Mojave Desert tortoises are keystone species. They create a lot of habitat with their burrows for a myriad of species from rodents to birds to even insects. Unfortunately, their populations have been declining since the 80s, and they were listed as threatened by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services in 1990. Tortoise populations are monitored because in order to keep tabs on the populations, per government regulation, and we look for things like clinical signs of disease as well as other morphometrics just like size of the tortoise and weight. Ticks are also often noted on these tortoise health assessments. In fact, ticks are known to commonly parasitize desert tortoises, and the two species we know that do commonly parasitize tortoises are ornithodoros parkeri and ornithodoros turicatae. They're often called tortoise ticks, especially in the tortoise literature. Mostly because they're difficult to identify. You have to count the number of bumps on the back, on their backs to be able to distinguish the two species apart. Or they're also just listed as ornithodoros species when they're found on tortoises. So, these are soft ticks, and their biology is a little bit different than hard ticks. They are nidicolous, meaning that they like to be in dark burrows and dark places. Tortoises really create excellent habitat for these guys and their burrows. They're generalists, which means they're not specific to one particular species for the blood meal. They'll feed on anything, any animal that comes their way. And they commonly parasitize other tortoises. They're also vectors of the causative agent of tick-borne relapsing fever. Tick-borne relapsing fever is caused by a wide variety of species in the genus Borrelia. It's a familiar genus because Lyme disease is also caused by a species of Borrelia. But I'm going to be focusing on the relapsing fever Borrelia that occur in the new world. And you can see the new world clade include three species of Borrelia, two of which are specialized with their tick factor, ornithodoros parkeri and ornithodoros turicatae, that occur in the Mojave Desert and parasitize desert tortoises. Both species of Borrelia cause tick-borne relapsing fever or TBRF in people. TBRF is characterized by high fever, around 103 to 105 degrees. Headache, muscle and joint aches, symptoms very similar to the flu, except these symptoms will reoccur. So usually with a fever and other symptoms lasting for about three days followed by a febrile period for about a week. And then those symptoms will return for another three days. This cycle can occur several times without treatment. Sometimes symptoms will resolve on their own, but it's treated with antibiotics like doxycycline. And this could also occur and passed if they get bit by a tick carrying relapsing fever group Borrelia, which is dogs. These relapses are due to the ability of a Borrelia to undergo multiple cyclic anagenic variations. So, what happens is Borrelia invades our antibodies by switching the surface proteins they express and become unrecognizable to the immune system. These relapses can make TBRF difficult to diagnose, but also, people will go into the doctor, complain of symptoms that are very similar to the flu, and they'll be prescribed antibiotics and get better. And then they're never tested for TBRF. So, it's thought that TBRF is underreported. Regardless, ticks are common in desert tortoise habitat and do come in contact with people, which suggests that they are a transmission risk. But very little is known about the ticks in the Mojave, and even less is known about the relationship to their host, the desert tortoise. We do know, though, that about 10% of wild desert tortoises are sampled are parasitized by ticks, and almost half of all active tortoise burrows are invested, particular with ornithodoros parkeri. So, we also know that tortoises create habitats for rodents, which are documented as reservoirs of TBRF Borrelia group in other parts of the country. So tortoises may not even be a part of this transmission cycle other than serving as a source of nutrition and creating habitat for these ticks. But the fact remains that tortoise biologists do come in contact with these tick species as well as hundreds of pet owners in Las Vegas who have adopted desert tortoises. And these ticks are competent vectors of a pathogen that is harmful to people. So there is a to be addressed of transmission, and doctors should consider tick-borne relapsing fever. In fact, we do have two cases to illustrate that it is a transmission risk. So the first case study I'm going to talk about happened in 2017. This happened to a tortoise biologist that was working at a study site about two hours north of Las Vegas. She was out sampling wild tortoise burrows. She did notice that there were ticks around the burrow, and about a week after she got home from her field trip, she became ill with a high fever. Then the high fever went away after a few days only to return. So we actually took a blood sample, and she did test positive for TBRF Borrelia by QPCR. The second case happened a bit more recently. Again, this is the tortoise biologist, except she was working at a captive site near Las Vegas, and that captive site is pictured in the middle picture there to the right. After working in this captive site digging up burrows, about a week later she did notice that she had been bit by a tick, and she became ill with a very high fever and other flu-like symptoms. And this cycle repeated until the third cycle actually prompted her to go to the ER. And because she was aware of the case that occurred in 2017, she asked the emergency room doctors to test her for Borrelia, and she did test positive for Borrelia, and was treated with Doxycycline, and her symptoms subsided. So we do have two confirmed cases of tick-borne relapsing fever occurring in the Mojave Desert after exposure to these tortoise ticks. So we want to learn more about the relationship between this vector and the host, the desert tortoise. Because these ticks are a risk factor for not only biologists but, like I mentioned, desert tortoise pet owners that live throughout Las Vegas. To shed some light on this relationship, I analyzed the tortoise health assessments that are required by the government, and I analyzed health assessments from 2007 to 2017. I looked at presence in relation, tick presence, in relation to tortoise morphometrics, location and clinical signs of disease. So I used the GLM and I binned my ticks into categories based on the range they're given on the health assessment datasheet, because I'm not asked for an exact number. So I use a median number for each range. And in instances where ticks are recorded as greater than ten, I just use the number ten. And in rare cases when the technician actually counted the exact number of ticks that were observed on the tortoise, I used that exact number. I also binned clinical signs into total number of clinical signs. My initial analysis, I found that about 8,341 ticks were noted on tortoises over this ten-year period. 494 of these ticks occurred on tortoises at the study site Coyote Springs, which is where case one was exposed to ticks. But most of them, almost 7,000 ticks, were noted on tortoises at captive sites. And this is where case two was exposed to tortoise ticks. So, from my model, I found that ticks were more likely to be found on females than males, and they were statistically significantly more likely to be found on captive sites than wild sites, which makes sense. And as far as my clinical signs go, I found that ticks were associated more with a tortoise that has a very low body condition score of three or one that has a very high body condition of seven, as well as weak posture and a higher number of total observed clinical signs. While fewer ticks were observed on tortoises with forage evidence. But what can we glean from this analysis about tick and tortoise biology? Well, ornithodoros ticks could be described as lazy, although they are just really well adapted for harsh environments like the Mojave Desert. These ticks stay in their burrows and nests, and they don't quest like hard ticks do for blood meal. They're happy to just wait in their dark burrow for something to come along. In fact, some ticks have been documented to go for a year or more without a blood meal. So it makes sense then that tortoises that have a higher site fidelity, like females that don't go from burrow to burrow looking for males for mates, would have a higher likelihood of getting ticks. Same goes for captive tortoises and tortoises that have more cynical signs of disease, which they just may not be feeling so hot so they're choosing to stay in their burrows. But captive tortoises don't have a choice. So it would seem that if tortoises are in their normal natural healthy desert environment, they can scrape off ticks and choose different burrows, which is good. Especially because captive tortoises are also more likely to come in contact with people. So, to add to this story, oh, and tortoises with forage evidence, then it makes sense that they wouldn't have as many ticks observed on them because they can scrape the ticks off because they are walking along through the desert looking for forage, things to eat, so ticks can either be scraped off as early as in the burrow, or they can decide to jump ship just because that intense sun is something they want to hide from. And they can hide under a rock or a dark piece of vegetation as the tortoise is wondering about the desert. To add to the story, we tested ticks collected from tortoises for Borrelia, and interestingly, we found only 7 out of the over 900 ticks that were tested positive for Borrelia, which is less than a 1% prevalence. It's pretty low, especially considering the density of ticks that are found in tortoise burrows. So TBRF is endemic in the West, but very little is known about the strains that occur in the Mojave Desert. In fact, this map on the top right corner from Forrester, et al, includes cases of tick-borne relapsing fever that were caused by ornithodoros hermsi. Nothing is known about the prevalence of Borrelia parkeri and Borrelia turicatae. So going back to that low prevalence rate in the tortoise ticks, there is an interesting relationship that exists between reptiles and ticks in Northern California, where we see ixodes pacificus, the hard tick, that carries the Lyme group Borrelia and causes Lyme's disease and sceloporus occidentalis of this lizard that occurs in the same habitat. So what happens is that it's been found that this lizard has a component in its blood, and you'll notice it's a Borreliacidal factor or a Borrelia killing factor. So when these ticks come up and take a blood meal from this lizard, the Borreliacidal factor in the lizard's blood actually kills any pathogen, any Borrelia that that tick may be carrying. So it leaves that tick incapable of transmitting disease because the Borrelia has been killed. So, what's really cool about this is in areas in Northern California where we see more lizards, we actually see fewer infected ticks. And this Borreliacidal factor is related to a thermal lay bioprotein that does occur in reptiles such as tortoises. But no research on resistance or susceptibility to tick-borne disease in desert tortoises exist. So this research is really just scratching the surface of ticks and tick-borne relapsing fever in the Mojave Desert, but we'd like to learn more about the relationships between tortoises and ticks. Rodents also share burrows, as I mentioned, with tortoises. So we don't know if they are helping to maintain the pathogen and tortoises are creating this perfect habitat for a potential reservoir hosts as well as the ticks. Which would help maintain Borrelia in the system or if they do have a Borreliacidal factor in their blood, like the lizards in Northern California, and are helping to keep Borrelia at a very low prevalence. Regardless, we know that tick-borne relapsing fever cases may increase as people continue to encroach on the Mojave Desert, and research to better understand the somatic disease dynamic is important to maintaining public health and potentially to help conserve populations of the threatened desert tortoise. So with that, I'd like to thank all of my collaborators and funders as well as the Zoonoses and One Health Updates call for giving me the opportunity to talk about this cool research. >> Thanks so much, Molly. That is indeed very cool research. So our next presentation is 2019 AAFP Feline Zoonoses Guidelines. And this will be given by Michael Lappin. Michael, when you're ready, please begin. >> Thank you very much. That was a great first talk, and I'm quite honored to be on the call today. This is my first experience, even though I've gotten to work with the CDC in a number of different ways over the years, including with our WSAVA One Health committee, which I'll talk about in a few minutes. But certainly, anyone has follow up calls, I believe Helen has made the email address available already. Please follow up as indicated. I direct the Center for Companion Animal Studies at Colorado State, which is a nonprofit that's really our mission is to promote research by young people. We fund a number of seed money grants to help people do clinical. Usually non-fatal research. But today I'm serving as a representative of the American Association of Feline Practitioners. As you can see, I'm a DVM. My PhD is in parasitology, and I'm board certified in small animal internal medicine. This particular call does not have any direct competition or any conflicts to report, but I do always thank all the different sponsors of our student granting projects, the Young Investigator Awards for giving gift money to help promote research by the next generation of veterinarians. So for today I'd like to introduce you to our WSAVA One Health committee. Michal Day from Bristol was our founder. It was his dream to have this small animal group be more active on the world stage for One Health issues. If you're not familiar with our group, we now have over 120 member countries or delegations around the world, and because of the AVMA being part of our group, that puts us over 200,000 veterinarians that we contact, hopefully, with our work. Casey's been our representative for the CDC since the inception of this particular endeavor, and as you can see, we currently have two medical doctors that serve with William working mainly with comparative oncology and Chand, who's a DVM, is the other part of comparative oncology. Peter is an MD in Rhode Island that just happens to be married to a feline specialist, so he does recognize the health benefits of pet ownership. So this particular group has been involved with the AAFP zoonoses committee, which we'll talk about today indirectly as well as directly. So, for example, Peter co-serves on our AAFP zoonoses guidelines, as well as our One Health committee. And as we develop these guidelines, which are the second edition. The first edition was over ten years of age, so we felt that it was time to refresh these. What we've done with our guidelines, if you're not familiar with the AAFP, which by the way is catvets.org. If you're not familiar with our guidelines, we tend to find topics that we believe are important. We often co-sponsor with the International Society of Feline Medicine, or we will co-certify each other's guidelines. This particular document, Carol Glasser from Pediatric AIDS in San Francisco in the old days, Carol was a repeat medical doctor that's also a doctor of veterinarian medicine on this particular document. Bottom line is then a group of these feline specialists or feline-interested individuals. Then we interact with attempting to come up with a document that we feel is probably most commonly read by veterinarians. But we are attempting to advance our One Health mission by interacting more closely with our especially primary care physicians. This particular page is just to point out that this document when we had finished at the committee level had approval from our board. We also then asked the Companion Animal Parasite Council, which is one of the parasite groups in the United States, WSAVA, and the International Society of Medicine, to evaluate the document for accuracy for one thing and then also to whether or not they wanted to state an endorsement. The messages that I wanted to get across to the group today, which I know has a great mix of different types of scientists, is that practicing veterinarians, they have to know many different things, multiple species, infectious diseases, and One Health issues is obviously not or only thing that we need to focus on in our practices. So it's great that we have such excellent resources like the capcvet.org for the American parasite guidelines. The ESCCAP group has had theirs translated into several different languages, very similar to the American guidelines, and all the great work that the CDC has done with healthy pets, healthy people, and that's been great to interact with that team, including Casey. So that's one of my most important go-to sites when I'm working with my lay people owners of cats. And then, of course, Bayer has done a nice job with their CVBD site. If nothing else are world occurrence maps for when animals come into the United States and we don't actually know, a practicing vet might not know what vector borne diseases were endemic in that country. Those worldwide occurrence maps are quite helpful. We also work with the other publications from the NIH, other federal agencies. AIDS info has been used, you know, quite frequently by our group and others over the years trying to really educate that variance for the most part. And then make sure that our veterinarians and physicians that are helping these family units, folks that own cats are on the same wavelength. Some of the graphics that have been developed are just fantastic and really, I think, is very helpful in helping people understand that they can potentially enjoy the health benefits of pet ownership but still trying to avoid those real potential zoonotic issues. So again, from the cat side of things being an AAFP member, I've got to admit our side is that pets are good, cats are good for you. And we certainly encourage and applaud those that have been studying, you know, the benefits of pet ownership. My wife's a veterinarian as well, and we both have agreed well, we're in our 20th season together, to own four dogs and four cats at any one time. And we've kept that pact for a long time. But we also realize that there are health risks from those kitties, and we have to be careful as, you know, our lives change and perhaps health issues develop. But what we believe from the AAFP side of things, and I hope this is the message that you'll get if you read that document that should be posted as well with the slides. We really would like to strengthen that interaction between physicians, veterinarians and the family. I think we all are familiar with some of the misperceptions of risk of individual cats for say acquiring say toxoplasma. Gosh, in the early days of HIV and certainly for a long time with pregnant people, a lot of folks, you know, assumed that you could increase your safety level by not owning cats, but not concurrently, reminding people to wash their hands after gardening or to wash their produce well. So I think our goal from AAFP and this document in particular is to at least try to have accurate information to the readers of the document to help people at least start on this even playing field when giving owners advice. What I personally said myself many times is I don't tell people to own cats or dogs. I don't tell them to get rid of their cat or their dog. But if there is a health issue that might relate to pet ownership, I believe that we should give them accurate information so the family unit can make their decisions. And of course doing that, working with the physician directly would give us the most strength. So our goals from the feline internal medicine or feline practitioner side of things is really to make sure that our lay persons realize that animals that are sick, if their cat has clinical signs of disease of any flavor, they could potentially have something that would be a little bit more likely to be shed to a family member. And so our goals are just to make sure that our folks realize in the sick animal arena to allow us to do the appropriate test diagnostics consultations. And in the wellness side of things, we certainly would like our owners to allow us to provide our strategic deworming, our flea and tick control that could help with potential shared vector zoonoses. And then, of course, our goals with the vets are to make sure that veterinarians realize that if animals are sick, they're a little bit more likely to be potentially a zoonotic health risk but also realize that there is benefit to flea tick preventative measures. Obviously, rabies is our biggest worldwide problem, that we want to make sure that countries that don't have current prevention programs get that stepped up over time. And then again, as I've emphasized on the previous slide, I think one of our biggest messages both from AAFP as well as WSAVA is that the veterinarian half of the family medical support would certainly love to work more closely with the physicians in a One Health arena. What we did with our document, both versions, including the 2019, which by the way just came out in December, so a fairly new document for us. We've gone ahead and talked about the animal contact zoonoses. Again, we believe that veterinarians are interested in what they might catch at work. And then of course, pet owners are very interested in what they might acquire from touching their cat. But we do spend time talking about contaminated vehicles. Shared vectors, of course, are emphasized a lot, especially with the bartonella issues. And then shared environments, we make sure that we have at least some discussion about many of these zoonotic diseases are not acquired from touching the pet directly but acquired from that shared environment. So just to give you a couple of examples, if you haven't had a chance to review the document yet, we then have a specific table for each of those major direct zoonoses routes of transmission and then have just a few words to remind people of the most common agents, what you might suspect in an animal infected with that particular agent and then the concurrent illness in people. And then what we've done, again, because this is for primary care feline practitioners as well as veterinarians in general, we did attempt to make some callouts for some of our more important things like the example I shared on this slide. All of our panelists were quite keen on feeding processed foods, especially if there's family members with immune deficiencies. This particular table is just one of the examples of the starting of the list of the bite, scratch and exudate associated organisms. Certainly, since we touch more cats than most, we certainly have to be cognizant as veterinarians that bite wounds be managed appropriately. In fact, one of my research technicians today just got a nice kitten bite earlier this morning. So she has already returned from urgent care, thankfully. But we also try to get other points across that have been generated by the CDC and others like that. Kind of a rumor amongst veterinarians that's kind of driven by one laboratory that perhaps we should be testing and treating all kittens for bartonella. And that, of course, goes against our judicious use of antimicrobial guideline statements. So we certainly pulled that one out as a callout for that particular organism. So as you read through the document, we certainly look forward to input, especially from CDC and folks that would be on some type of call. We've then tried to summarize some of the general guidelines and one table for veterinary staff members and then a second table for owners. And then the AAFP, we do like to make brochures and things that are available for distribution to clinics and also to owners to supplement what we might see on healthy pets, healthy people at the CDC. We consider you guys to be the gold standard and appreciate the opportunity to work with Dr. Behravesh on those things. So bottom line is we try to get that message across that clinically ill cats should be seen. Healthy cats are relatively safe, especially if you wash your hands a lot, feed processed foods, clean the litter box daily, etcetera. And continue to try to interact more with our physician colleagues to spread the word. So, so far I think we've gotten the point across hopefully that we believe at the AAFP level that most pets are safe, in the cat world especially, specifically with AAFP. However, there are things that are shared, so we are attempting to continue to partner with groups like WSAVA. And Michael headed this up. He was the chair of the committee at the time we published this paper. And I always lovingly call this the other AAFP being the American Family Physician group rather than the cat group. And we were quite pleased to have one of our dual publications in that particular journal. And we'll continue to try to spread that word. One way that we're doing that is with the One Health certificate course for veterinarians, and we do allow animal technicians to take this course as well. In the United States, the groups of lecturers are RACE certified so that veterinarians can get CPD credit. I certainly would love any interactions from those on the call today. If you'd like to visit the website, we're hosting that at CSU just because we actually have a system to do that, but it is a WSAVA endeavor. We have a number of One Health modules that still need to be recorded, and we look forward to having all 20 of these online. And what we're doing with the veterinarians that are interested, they can earn a certificate by completing all the modules, and that can be displayed in their veterinary clinics showing that they have an interest in expertise in One Health. So thank you very much for listening today. I look forward to the next talk and then questions at the end or follow up emails. Thank you. >> Thank you so much, Michael. Our final presentation is Community-Based Prevention of Epidemic Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever Among Minority Populations in Sonora, Mexico, using a One Health approach, and it's going to be presented by Anne Straily. Anne, please begin when you're ready. >> All right, thank you for that introduction. So this is a project that I was fortunate enough to work on as an EIS officer with [inaudible] zoonoses branch. I've since moved on from the [inaudible] zoonoses branch, so I'm giving this presentation on behalf of my colleagues in RSV and also in Sonora, Mexico who are unable to make today's ZOHU call. So rocky mountain spotted fever or RMSF for short is caused by the obligate intracellular bacteria rickettsia rickettsii, which likes to infect endothelial cells lining the blood vessels which when damaged become leaky and results in a widespread vasculitis. So the picture at the bottom right-hand corner there demonstrates the endothelial cells of a blood vessel which is cut in crossed section containing the rickettsia rickettsia bacteria, which is stained red. RMSF is a tick borne illness, and it is treatable with doxycycline, but treatment really needs to be initiated early in the course of illness to obtain the best outcome. Early symptoms, unfortunately, are fairly nonspecific, things like fever, headache, muscle pain, all of which can be easily confused with other diseases. So on the next slide I'm going to show you some pictures of what advanced severe RMSF looks like. I should warn you that some of these pictures can be graphic. Without timely treatment with doxycycline, RMSF progresses rapidly. Extensive vasculopathy results in necrosis and gangrene, which often requires amputation of digits or limbs. Other long-term sequelae can include neurologic complications such as cognitive impairment or hearing loss, peripheral neuropathies, cerebellar or vestibular motor dysfunction, just to name a few. Death occurs due to multiorgan failure and disseminated intravascular coagulation, and case fatality rates without timely treatment are around 25%. Epidemic RMSF is associated with massive infestations of the brown dog tick, Rhipicephalus sanguineus, which is pictured here. The brown dog tick has actually been recognized as a vector of RMSF in Mexico and the American southwest since the 1940s. The dog is the preferred host for all life stages of the brown dog tick, but the tick will also readily invest human dwellings and kennels when it's not on the dog, and the red arrow here is pointing to a tick that was spotted on the wall of a house in our intervention area. So dogs can be heavily infested with ticks, like in the photos here. And actually, each one of the little black spots on the brown puppy in the picture on the right there is a tick. And again, another picture of a dog heavily infested with tick. Each one of those little gray blubs on that dog's ear is a tick. So these heavily infested dogs support large populations of ticks in very close proximity to humans. And the warm climate in Mexico provides a suitable environment for ticks to be active year-round. So this isn't a seasonal problem. As a result, the ticks are everywhere. They're in the houses. They're in the yards. They're on the dogs. They're almost impossible to escape. And humans are bitten as a result of contact with tick-infested dogs or tick-infested environments. And kids are especially at risk of exposure because they have increased contact with dogs and spend more time playing in spaces where ticks live, like in the yard. So in case you're unfamiliar with where Sonora is, Sonora is a state in Northwest Mexico which is outlined here in red, and it borders the U.S. states of Arizona and New Mexico to the north. During the time period from 2004 to 2016, there were almost 1,400 of RMSF cases reported in the state of Sonora with 250 deaths almost. Seventy-five percent of those cases corresponded to people living in disadvantaged neighborhoods. Between 2009 to 2015, there was one small impoverished community in particular that was severely affected by RMSF. They had median accumulative incidence rates of 29 cases per 100,000 people, which is around six times the median accumulative incidence rates for the rest of the state. Three-quarters of those cases occurred within just a ten-block area that consisted of 703 households. So quite a focal occurrence there. In 2015, the Mexican Administrative Health actually declared RMSF an epidemiologic emergency. So this is a picture of community A. The community A is that severely affected ten-block section that we talked about on the previous slide. It's part of a larger but still impoverished rural community that's located about 50 miles from Hermosillo. Community A is inhabited predominantly by agricultural laborers with a majority of migrant families coming from Oaxaca and other states in the south of Mexico. So community A was selected as our intervention community. Community B which was selected as the control community is an impoverished suburban community of about 730 households that located on the outskirts of Hermosillo. It was selected because it was geographically isolated from community A, which was important to limit the possibility of intervention bleed over but also because it was highly impacted by RMSF, although not necessarily to the degree that community A was. In fact, no other community was hit quite as hard by RMSF as community A. So community B experienced six cases of RMSF during 2009 to 2016, three of which were fatal and one of which occurred in a child. So now we're going to take a closer look at the intervention. The goal of which was to reduce the number of human RMSF cases. The intervention was designed using a One Health approach with components targeting animals, the environment and people. We sought to control ticks on dogs, control ticks in the environment and educate people in the community about RMSF. So if this sounds familiar, it's because this approach was modeled off a very successful intervention that was previously used in Arizona. So component number 1, control ticks on dogs. Each dog received two collars, like you see in the photo here. The gray collar is the tick collar. This is a collar that contains flumethrin and imidacloprid. It provides tick control for up to eight months, and it actually holds up pretty well in a desert environment. Dogs have to be at least eight weeks old, and it has to be fitted and worn correctly for maximum effectiveness. The red collar is just a simple nylon collar. It was provided so that people would not attempt to handle or restrain dogs using the gray collar, because the gray collar, the tick collar, is actually designed to break off if the dog struggles against it. The red collars are also a fairly handy and visible marker that dogs are participating in the intervention. So puppies less than eight weeks of age and therefore too young to receive a collar were instead treated with fipronil spray, and they were aged based on their dentition. Component number 2, control ticks in the environment. Participating homes received pesticide applications with deltamethrin on a bimonthly basis. The deltamethrin was applied by vector control operators with the Sonora Department of Health, and homes were sprayed inside and outside, and the adjacent yard areas were also treated. Component number 3 was to educate the community. So here we developed a pictorial bifold pamphlet to use in this area. Literacy is quite variable in this community, and Trique, which is the indigenous language which is spoken by many residents in community A is actually not a written language. So we had community health workers that spoke Trique that were available to translate for households that did not speak Spanish. These pictorial pamphlets covered how RMSF is translated, the signs and symptoms of the disease, when to seek care from the health clinic and how to prevent it. So it wasn't ethical to just do nothing for community B, our control community, given how serious RMSF is. So community B continued to receive the standard RMSF prevention activities used by the Ministry of Health, which includes community education and environmental acaricide treatment of home. I should also mention that the larger town outside of the ten-block area that made up community A also continue to receive the MOH standard of prevention for RMSF during the stay period. So the real difference here between the intervention and control communities is the provision of tick collars on the dogs. There were a number of different measures that we collected during the study. We did a pre and post knowledge, attitudes and practices or KAP survey that collected information on a number of different things, including dog ownership practices, tick contact and awareness of RMSF. We also visually inspected a systematically selected random sample of dogs for ticks. And these tick counts were categorized as no ticks seen, one to ten, 10 to 100 and over 100 ticks. The study took place during March to November of 2016. So beginning in March, we registered homes and collected the pre-KAP survey data. We did the first environmental acaricide treatment, and in community A we enrolled dogs and applied the tick collars. We went back to both communities in May, July and September where we did the tick burden, the monitoring of the tick burdens on dogs, and the participating homes received another round of acaricide treatments. In community A specifically, we also replaced lost tick collars and gave new dogs new collars during each of those visits. And finally, in November, we collected the post-KAP survey data and did a final tick count on the dogs. So we don't have time to go over all the results, so for today's presentation I'm just going to focus on the measures of tick contact and the visual burden of ticks on dogs. The first result that I want to highlight is the number of households of dogs with dogs with ticks. So both community A and B saw a decrease in visible tick infestations on the dogs. But it was only in community A which is the purple line here where that decrease was statistically significant. So in community A at the beginning of the study, a full one-third of households had a dog with ticks, and that number decreased to only 9% of households by the end of the study. The second result that I want to highlight is the report of tick activity by homeowners. So we asked participants if they saw ticks in their house, which is denoted by the orange line, or in the yard, which is denoted by the green line. And in community a, which is the solid line, both of those measures actually decreased significantly while in community B, which is the dashed lines, both of those measures actually increased during the study. So there were far fewer households in community A that reported seeing ticks in their house or in their yards at the end of the study compared to the beginning and also compared to community B. So we'll finish up with perhaps the most important result of all, which is the number of human RMSF cases. So in community B, there were two confirmed cases of Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever and one death reported during the study period. While in community A, there were actually no cases of human RMSF reported during the study period. And in fact, there were no human cases of RMSF reported in this area until April of 2018 which is a full 18 months after the study ended. So in conclusion, we were able to demonstrate that this One Health approach successfully prevented RMSF cases in a high-risk, heavily impacted and impoverished area of Sonora, Mexico. So each element in this strategy really contributed to a decreased number of dogs with ticks, decrease the number of ticks that people saw in their house or in their yard and also contributed to an increased awareness of RMSF in the community. And all of these different components together resulted in a decreased number of human RMSF cases and deaths. So that's all I have for you today. Thank you so much for your time and attention. >> Thanks so much, Anne. It's always great to see those types of One Health approaches occurring in the field. At this time, we'd like to take questions from any of our presenters. If anyone in the audience has a question, please call 1-800-857-9665 and enter participant passcode 6236326. Press star one and give the operator your name and affiliation. Please name the presenter or topic at the beginning of your question. So Brad, do we have any questions yet? >> And once again, that is star one. If you are already on the phone, please press star and then one at this time. One moment, Miss, while we gather questions. We have Christina Nelson from the CDC. Miss Nelson, please go ahead with your question. >> Hi everyone. First of all, I just want to say the ZOHU call always has good speakers, but the speakers today were particularly excellent. I really enjoyed all of these presentations, so thank you to everyone. My question is specifically for Mike Lappin. I know you mentioned that for cats for owners who are immunocompetent it is not recommended that veterinarians test or treat for bartonella if the cats are asymptomatic. For immunocompromised owners, my understanding was that the recommendation is still the same. That, you know, if the cats are asymptomatic and the owners were doing okay, asymptomatic in terms of no evidence of cat scratch disease or other things, then the cat still should not be tested or treated from bartonella because, you know, it's hard to give antibiotics to the cats. And sometimes the owners get scratched when they're trying to give the antibiotics. So I was just wondering your comments on that, have any recommendations changed and any other thoughts. >> Yeah, so thank you for the kind comment about the lecture. I certainly enjoyed the other two a lot. And to directly answer this question, we follow the lead for the CDC of course and aid them though in pet ownership by immunocompromised people. And I support those recommendations. Honestly, doing something like soft claws and bleed control is probably going to control the majority of zoonotic transmission of bartonella by flea or dander or scratches. And so our group the AAFP, a group of veterinarians, we don't support testing and treating cats of immune suppressed families in general. However, the caveat always does come up is what if they walk in and they say they've heard about bartonella, and my cat has had fleas. I'm going to relinquish the cat unless I know. And in that case, you now, I believe that most veterinarians would go ahead and test, even, hoping for negative [inaudible] and negative PCR so that we can then just put that to bed. Because, gosh, my clients, well I practiced in Georgia, Oklahoma, California and 30 years in Colorado. You know, one thing though, even though they know there's, even though we tell them there's probably little risk, once they know they're having antibody positive or whatever, they do want to treat. So again, I think our overall recommendation would follow exactly the CDC's which is there's probably no indication that test healthy cats of any family, but all families should do flea control and avoid bites and scratches. >> All right, okay. Thanks Mike. That's very helpful. >> Once again, if you have a question and would like to ask it over the phone, please press star and the one at this time. Please stand by for any further questions from the phone. And once again, that is star one for questions over the phone. One moment please. Next, we have Dr. Pat Kline from the USDA Forest Service. Please go ahead. >> Yeah, hi, good afternoon. This is Dr. Pat Kline from USDA Forest Service. My question is actually for Dr. Lappin as well. I've actually had an opportunity to read the new zoonotic guideline, and it's very well done. I had one quick question if I could get some feedback from you regarding cats and toxoplasmosis. We do recognize that the litter of the cat is the definitive host, and as you were explaining in your guide, yes, oftentimes the exposure to humans is through environmental exposure route. So, how does AAFP stand, or what's your position on advocating to keep your cats indoors, I mean all of your pet cats for all the right reasons in a way. But also to not add to that environmental burden if they're going to be shedding toxoplasmosis in the environment? Would you make any comments on that please? >> Yes thank you for that great question. Now, I did not serve on any of the cat wellness committee work from AAFP. I've just been with the zoonoses and vaccine guidelines. But you may know some of the listeners today. There's kind of a large push from some feline practitioners and that, you know, cats should be allowed to go outside. And so that particular, you know, discussion, is kind of a hot button amongst our team. And, you know, with the tradeoffs of, you know, cats behaviorally want to be outdoors, whereas indoor cats live longer. Don't pass toxoplasma environment, don't eat, you know, hundreds of birds per year. You know, there's lots of great discussion on both sides. So our committee stayed a little bit out of that fray. But certainly, it's well established that it's not just domestic cats. They can complete the lifecycle of the organism as well. So confining all cats indoors, you know, in theory, would hopefully lessen the world's outdoor burden of toxo OSS, but it probably wouldn't eliminate it because of other, you know, competent felids. >> Thank you for that. And by the way, I've owned cats for 30 years, and I adore them as much since I'm a veterinarian as well. But none of my cats go outdoors. And I'm lucky because they've lived to be 18 and, you know, 20 plus years. So, I really love cats. I'm just looking out for their best interests as well. Thank you. >> Yeah, great comment for that. We love ours as well. And we kind of have the compromised position that we actually have an outdoor cat run. But they do ingest birds, bunnies and rodents and one snake in their outdoor cat run. So they weren't eaten by the coyotes, but they've certain eaten their share of other creatures. So I should probably test the soil there in their cat run to see if there's [inaudible] OSS. >> Thanks for your questions. We're going to wrap up now. But if you do have additional questions, you can also email the presenters. You'll be able to find their email addresses on the ZOHU call webpage for today's call. So I just wanted to say thanks again for all of today's speakers, for their excellent presentations and give you a few instructions on continuing education. So, you can receive free continuing education, and that's available at CDC.gov/onehealth/ ZOHU/continuingeducation. And the course access code is onehalt2020, all lowercase. To receive free CE for today's webcast, complete the evaluation at CDC.gov/PCEonline by March 9th, 2020. Our web on demand recording of today's call will also be posted online at CDC.gov/onehealth/ZOHU/2020/ February.html by March 10th, 2020. Our next call will take place on Wednesday, March 4th, at 2 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. Please feel free to send suggestions and questions to ZOHUcall@CDC.gov. And for more information and to subscribe to our email newsletter, please visit CDC.gov/onehealth/ZOHU. Thanks again to everyone for your participation, and we will now end today's call. Thank you. >> Thank you all for your participation on today's conference call. At this time, all parties --
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