Rift Valley Fever: risk of persistence, spread and impact in Mayotte (France)

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskning

Dokumenter

  • Julio Alvarez
  • Dominique Joseph Bicout
  • Paolo Calistri
  • Klaus Depner
  • Julian Ashley Drewe
  • Bruno Garin-Bastuji
  • Jose Luis Gonzales Rojas
  • Christian Gortezar Schmidt
  • Virginie Michel
  • Miguel Angel Miranda Chueca
  • Helen Clare Roberts
  • Liisa Helena Sihvonen
  • Karl Stahl
  • Antonio Velarde
  • Arvo Viltrop
  • Christoph Winckler
  • Catherine Cetre-Sossah
  • Veronique Chevalier
  • Clazien de Vos
  • Simon Gubbins
  • Sotiria-Eleni Antoniou
  • Alessandro Broglia
  • Sofie Dhollander
  • Yves Van der Stede
Rift Valley fever (RVF ) is a vector‐borne disease transmitted by different mosquito species, especially Aedes and Culex genus, to animals and humans. In November 2018, RVF re‐emerged in Mayotte (France) after 11 years. Up to the end of October 2019, 126 outbreaks in animals and 143 human cases were reported. RVF mortality was 0.01%, and the number of abortions reported in polymerase chain reaction (PCR )‐positive ruminants was fivefold greater than the previous 7 years. Milk loss production in 2019 compared to 2015–2018 was estimated to be 18%, corresponding to an economic loss of around €191,000 in all of Mayotte. The tropical climate in Mayotte provides conditions for the presence of mosquitoes during the whole year, and illegal introductions of animals represent a continuous risk of (re)introduction of RVF . The probability of RVF virus (RVFV ) persisting in Mayotte for 5 or more years was estimated to be < 10% but could be much lower if vertical transmission in vectors does not occur. Persistence of RVF by vertical transmission in Mayotte and Réunion appears to be of minor relevance compared to other pathways of re‐introduction (i.e. animal movement). However, there is a high uncertainty since there is limited information about the vertical transmission of some of the major species of vectors of RVFV in Mayotte and Réunion. The only identified pathways for the risk of spread of RVF from Mayotte to other countries were by infected vectors transported in airplanes or by wind currents. For the former, the risk of introduction of RVF to continental France was estimated to 4 × 10−6 epidemic per year (median value; 95% CI : 2 × 10−8; 0.0007), and 0.001 epidemic per year to Réunion (95% CI : 4 × 10−6; 0.16). For the latter pathway, mosquitoes dispersing on the wind from Mayotte between January and April 2019 could have reached the Comoros Islands, Madagascar, Mozambique and, possibly, Tanzania. However, these countries are already endemic for RVF , and an incursion of RVFV ‐infected mosquitoes would have negligible impact.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummere06093
TidsskriftEFSA Journal
Vol/bind18
Udgave nummer4
Antal sider61
ISSN1831-4732
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2020

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