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Vaccination strategies for managing brucellosis in Yellowstone bison. (Special Issue: Brucellosis: a transboundary zoonotic disease.)

机译:黄石野牛布鲁氏菌病的疫苗接种策略。 (特刊:布鲁氏菌病:一种跨界的人畜共患病。)

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Concerns over migratory bison (Bison bison) at Yellowstone National Park transmitting brucellosis (Brucella abortus) to cattle herds on adjacent lands led to proposals for bison vaccination. We developed an individual-based model to evaluate how brucellosis infection might respond under alternate vaccination strategies, including: (1) vaccination of female calves and yearlings captured at the park boundary when bison move outside the primary conservation area; (2) combining boundary vaccination with the remote delivery of vaccine to female calves and yearlings distributed throughout the park; and (3) vaccinating all female bison (including adults) during boundary capture and throughout the park using remote delivery of vaccine. Simulations suggested Alternative 3 would be most effective, with brucellosis seroprevalence decreasing by 66% (from 0.47 to 0.16) over a 30-year period resulting from 29% of the population receiving protection through vaccination. Under this alternative, bison would receive multiple vaccinations that extend the duration of vaccine protection and defend against recurring infection in latently infected animals. The initial decrease in population seroprevalence will likely be slow due to high initial seroprevalence (40-60%), long-lived antibodies, and the culling of some vaccinated bison that were subsequently exposed to field strain Brucella and reacted positively on serologic tests. Vaccination is unlikely to eradicate B. abortus from Yellowstone bison, but could be an effective tool for reducing the level of infection. Our approach and findings have applicability world-wide for managers dealing with intractable wildlife diseases that cross wildlife-livestock and wildlife-human interfaces and affect public health or economic well-being.Digital Object Identifier http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2010.03.055
机译:对黄石国家公园迁徙野牛( Bison bison )的担忧,将布鲁氏菌病( Brucella abortus )传播给邻近土地上的牛群,因此提出了对野牛进行疫苗接种的建议。我们开发了一个基于个体的模型来评估布鲁氏菌病感染在其他疫苗接种策略下的反应,包括:(1)当野牛移出主要保护区时,在公园边界捕获的雌性小牛和一岁幼崽进行疫苗接种; (2)将边界疫苗接种与向整个公园内分布的雌性犊牛和一岁幼鸽的远程疫苗接种相结合; (3)在边界捕获期间和整个公园内,使用远程分发疫苗为所有雌性野牛(包括成年牛)接种疫苗。模拟结果表明,备选方案3最为有效,布鲁氏菌病的血清阳性率在30年内下降了66%(从0.47降至0.16),这是因为29%的人口通过疫苗接种获得了保护。在这种选择下,野牛将接受多次疫苗接种,从而延长疫苗保护的持续时间,并防御潜伏感染动物的反复感染。初始血清阳性率高(40-60%),抗体寿命长,以及某些接种过的野牛的选种随后会暴露于野外菌株 Brucella 和在血清学检查中反应积极。疫苗不可能根除 B。黄石野牛的流产,但可能是降低感染水平的有效工具。我们的方法和发现在全球范围内适用于处理跨越野生生物-牲畜和野生生物-人为界面并影响公共健康或经济福祉的棘手野生生物疾病的管理者。数字对象标识符http://dx.doi.org/10.1016 /j.vaccine.2010.03.055

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