"Schmallenberg" virus: Analysis of the Epidemiological Data and Assessment of Impact: EFSA-Q-2012-00305

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportRapportForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

"Schmallenberg" virus: Analysis of the Epidemiological Data and Assessment of Impact : EFSA-Q-2012-00305. / Balenghien, Thomas; Bødker, Rene; Bøtner, Anette; Gubbins, Simon; de Koeijer, Aline; Wilson, Anthony; Beer, Martin; Abrahantes, José Cortiñas; Willgert, Katriina; Afonso, Ana; Richardson, Jane; Vlachou, Angeliki; Christoph, Eugen; Berthe, Franck; Verloo, Didier.

European Food Safety Authority, 2012. 89 s. (EFSA Journal; Nr. 2768, Bind 10(6)).

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportRapportForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Balenghien, T, Bødker, R, Bøtner, A, Gubbins, S, de Koeijer, A, Wilson, A, Beer, M, Abrahantes, JC, Willgert, K, Afonso, A, Richardson, J, Vlachou, A, Christoph, E, Berthe, F & Verloo, D 2012, "Schmallenberg" virus: Analysis of the Epidemiological Data and Assessment of Impact: EFSA-Q-2012-00305. EFSA Journal, nr. 2768, bind 10(6), European Food Safety Authority. https://doi.org/10.2903/j.efsa.2012.2768

APA

Balenghien, T., Bødker, R., Bøtner, A., Gubbins, S., de Koeijer, A., Wilson, A., Beer, M., Abrahantes, J. C., Willgert, K., Afonso, A., Richardson, J., Vlachou, A., Christoph, E., Berthe, F., & Verloo, D. (2012). "Schmallenberg" virus: Analysis of the Epidemiological Data and Assessment of Impact: EFSA-Q-2012-00305. European Food Safety Authority. EFSA Journal Bind 10(6) Nr. 2768 https://doi.org/10.2903/j.efsa.2012.2768

Vancouver

Balenghien T, Bødker R, Bøtner A, Gubbins S, de Koeijer A, Wilson A o.a. "Schmallenberg" virus: Analysis of the Epidemiological Data and Assessment of Impact: EFSA-Q-2012-00305. European Food Safety Authority, 2012. 89 s. (EFSA Journal; Nr. 2768, Bind 10(6)). https://doi.org/10.2903/j.efsa.2012.2768

Author

Balenghien, Thomas ; Bødker, Rene ; Bøtner, Anette ; Gubbins, Simon ; de Koeijer, Aline ; Wilson, Anthony ; Beer, Martin ; Abrahantes, José Cortiñas ; Willgert, Katriina ; Afonso, Ana ; Richardson, Jane ; Vlachou, Angeliki ; Christoph, Eugen ; Berthe, Franck ; Verloo, Didier. / "Schmallenberg" virus: Analysis of the Epidemiological Data and Assessment of Impact : EFSA-Q-2012-00305. European Food Safety Authority, 2012. 89 s. (EFSA Journal; Nr. 2768, Bind 10(6)).

Bibtex

@book{7f9b76df9b654f24a74c23e493370bad,
title = "{"}Schmallenberg{"} virus: Analysis of the Epidemiological Data and Assessment of Impact: EFSA-Q-2012-00305",
abstract = "This scientific report provides an overall assessment of the impact of the infection on animal health, animal production and animal welfare of the provisionally named “Schmallenberg” virus (SBV) first detected in Germany. In Europe, 3745 holdings have been reported with SBV cases confirmed by laboratory testing across several Member States, mid May 2012. EFSA reviewed the epidemiological reports noting that SBV has been detected in cattle, sheep, goats and a bison. SBV antibodies have been detected in deer and no other species are known to be affected. EFSA also confirms that new studies support the initial assessment undertaken by the European Center for Disease Control and Prevention, that it is very unlikely that SBV poses a risk to humans. In terms of transmission routes, recent entomological investigations have identified SBV in field samples of biting midges of the Culicoides obsoletus group. Currently there is no evidence of any other route of transmission other than transplacental or vector borne routes. EFSA coordinated the collation of SBV epidemiological data during 2011-2012 in order to obtain comparable data for Europe. The maximum proportion of reported sheep holdings with SBV confirmed was 4% per country and 7.6% per region while for cattle less than 1.3 % of holdings were reported as SBV confirmed at both country and regional level. In order to assess the impact of SBV(spatial and temporal spread, proportion of affected holding and potential projection of arthrogryposis hydranencephaly syndrome cases) three models were used. In regions with SBV confirmed holdings, assuming a high prevalence of infection and post infection immunity, impact in the 2012-2013 calving and lambing season should be low. However, assuming SBV survived the winter of 2011, the models suggest that in unaffected regions with suitable temperatures for within herd transmission by vectors and high density of susceptible species (cattle and sheep) SBV infection is likely to spread. EFSA puts forward a number of recommendations to fill the knowledge gaps, these include but are not limited to: continuing serological investigations in affected regions and regions neighbouring affected areas, within herd and animal level impact investigation, monitoring putative vector population, setting SBV host vector transmission parameters, investigating other routes of transmission, host susceptibility, virulence and vulnerable period during gestation. Furthermore, the possible origins of the virus should be investigated as more information becomes available on the virus characteristics and infection epidemiology.",
author = "Thomas Balenghien and Rene B{\o}dker and Anette B{\o}tner and Simon Gubbins and {de Koeijer}, Aline and Anthony Wilson and Martin Beer and Abrahantes, {Jos{\'e} Corti{\~n}as} and Katriina Willgert and Ana Afonso and Jane Richardson and Angeliki Vlachou and Eugen Christoph and Franck Berthe and Didier Verloo",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.2903/j.efsa.2012.2768",
language = "English",
series = "EFSA Journal",
number = "2768",
publisher = "European Food Safety Authority",

}

RIS

TY - RPRT

T1 - "Schmallenberg" virus: Analysis of the Epidemiological Data and Assessment of Impact

T2 - EFSA-Q-2012-00305

AU - Balenghien, Thomas

AU - Bødker, Rene

AU - Bøtner, Anette

AU - Gubbins, Simon

AU - de Koeijer, Aline

AU - Wilson, Anthony

AU - Beer, Martin

AU - Abrahantes, José Cortiñas

AU - Willgert, Katriina

AU - Afonso, Ana

AU - Richardson, Jane

AU - Vlachou, Angeliki

AU - Christoph, Eugen

AU - Berthe, Franck

AU - Verloo, Didier

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - This scientific report provides an overall assessment of the impact of the infection on animal health, animal production and animal welfare of the provisionally named “Schmallenberg” virus (SBV) first detected in Germany. In Europe, 3745 holdings have been reported with SBV cases confirmed by laboratory testing across several Member States, mid May 2012. EFSA reviewed the epidemiological reports noting that SBV has been detected in cattle, sheep, goats and a bison. SBV antibodies have been detected in deer and no other species are known to be affected. EFSA also confirms that new studies support the initial assessment undertaken by the European Center for Disease Control and Prevention, that it is very unlikely that SBV poses a risk to humans. In terms of transmission routes, recent entomological investigations have identified SBV in field samples of biting midges of the Culicoides obsoletus group. Currently there is no evidence of any other route of transmission other than transplacental or vector borne routes. EFSA coordinated the collation of SBV epidemiological data during 2011-2012 in order to obtain comparable data for Europe. The maximum proportion of reported sheep holdings with SBV confirmed was 4% per country and 7.6% per region while for cattle less than 1.3 % of holdings were reported as SBV confirmed at both country and regional level. In order to assess the impact of SBV(spatial and temporal spread, proportion of affected holding and potential projection of arthrogryposis hydranencephaly syndrome cases) three models were used. In regions with SBV confirmed holdings, assuming a high prevalence of infection and post infection immunity, impact in the 2012-2013 calving and lambing season should be low. However, assuming SBV survived the winter of 2011, the models suggest that in unaffected regions with suitable temperatures for within herd transmission by vectors and high density of susceptible species (cattle and sheep) SBV infection is likely to spread. EFSA puts forward a number of recommendations to fill the knowledge gaps, these include but are not limited to: continuing serological investigations in affected regions and regions neighbouring affected areas, within herd and animal level impact investigation, monitoring putative vector population, setting SBV host vector transmission parameters, investigating other routes of transmission, host susceptibility, virulence and vulnerable period during gestation. Furthermore, the possible origins of the virus should be investigated as more information becomes available on the virus characteristics and infection epidemiology.

AB - This scientific report provides an overall assessment of the impact of the infection on animal health, animal production and animal welfare of the provisionally named “Schmallenberg” virus (SBV) first detected in Germany. In Europe, 3745 holdings have been reported with SBV cases confirmed by laboratory testing across several Member States, mid May 2012. EFSA reviewed the epidemiological reports noting that SBV has been detected in cattle, sheep, goats and a bison. SBV antibodies have been detected in deer and no other species are known to be affected. EFSA also confirms that new studies support the initial assessment undertaken by the European Center for Disease Control and Prevention, that it is very unlikely that SBV poses a risk to humans. In terms of transmission routes, recent entomological investigations have identified SBV in field samples of biting midges of the Culicoides obsoletus group. Currently there is no evidence of any other route of transmission other than transplacental or vector borne routes. EFSA coordinated the collation of SBV epidemiological data during 2011-2012 in order to obtain comparable data for Europe. The maximum proportion of reported sheep holdings with SBV confirmed was 4% per country and 7.6% per region while for cattle less than 1.3 % of holdings were reported as SBV confirmed at both country and regional level. In order to assess the impact of SBV(spatial and temporal spread, proportion of affected holding and potential projection of arthrogryposis hydranencephaly syndrome cases) three models were used. In regions with SBV confirmed holdings, assuming a high prevalence of infection and post infection immunity, impact in the 2012-2013 calving and lambing season should be low. However, assuming SBV survived the winter of 2011, the models suggest that in unaffected regions with suitable temperatures for within herd transmission by vectors and high density of susceptible species (cattle and sheep) SBV infection is likely to spread. EFSA puts forward a number of recommendations to fill the knowledge gaps, these include but are not limited to: continuing serological investigations in affected regions and regions neighbouring affected areas, within herd and animal level impact investigation, monitoring putative vector population, setting SBV host vector transmission parameters, investigating other routes of transmission, host susceptibility, virulence and vulnerable period during gestation. Furthermore, the possible origins of the virus should be investigated as more information becomes available on the virus characteristics and infection epidemiology.

U2 - 10.2903/j.efsa.2012.2768

DO - 10.2903/j.efsa.2012.2768

M3 - Report

T3 - EFSA Journal

BT - "Schmallenberg" virus: Analysis of the Epidemiological Data and Assessment of Impact

PB - European Food Safety Authority

ER -

ID: 238851649