Detection of mortality clusters associated with highly pathogenic avian influenza in poultry: a theoretical analysis

被引:17
作者
Savill, Nicholas J. [1 ]
Rose, Suzanne G. St. [1 ]
Woolhouse, Mark E. J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Edinburgh, Inst Immunol & Infect Res, Ashworth Labs, Ctr Infect Dis, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, Midlothian, Scotland
关键词
avian influenza; mathematical model; surveillance;
D O I
10.1098/rsif.2008.0133
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Rapid detection of infectious disease outbreaks is often crucial for their effective control. One example is highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) such as H5N1 in commercial poultry flocks. There are no quantitative data, however, on how quickly the effects of HPAI infection in poultry flocks can be detected. Here, we study, using an individual-based mathematical model, time to detection in chicken flocks. Detection is triggered when mortality, food or water intake or egg production in layers pass recommended thresholds suggested from the experience of past HPAI outbreaks. We suggest a new threshold for caged flocks-the cage mortality detection threshold-as a more sensitive threshold than current ones. Time to detection is shown to depend nonlinearly on R-0 and is particularly sensitive for R-0 < 10. It also depends logarithmically on flock size and number of birds per cage. We also examine how many false alarms occur in uninfected flocks when we vary detection thresholds owing to background mortality. The false alarm rate is shown to be sensitive to detection thresholds, dependent on flock size and background mortality and independent of the length of the production cycle. We suggest that current detection thresholds appear sufficient to rapidly detect the effects of a high R-0 HPAI strain such as H7N7 over a wide range of flock sizes. Time to detection of the effects of a low R-0 HPAI strain such as H5N1 can be significantly improved, particularly for large flocks, by lowering detection thresholds, and this can be accomplished without causing excessive false alarms in uninfected flocks. The results are discussed in terms of optimizing the design of disease surveillance programmes in general.
引用
收藏
页码:1409 / 1419
页数:11
相关论文
共 33 条
[1]  
Anderson I., 2002, Foot mouth disease 2001: lessons to be learned inquiry report
[2]   Multifocal avian influenza (H5N1) outbreak [J].
Balicer, Ran D. ;
Reznikovich, Shmuel ;
Berman, Elyakum ;
Pirak, Michael ;
Inbar, Amnon ;
Pokamunski, Shimon ;
Grotto, Itamar .
EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2007, 13 (10) :1601-1603
[3]   AVIAN INFLUENZA ON A MULTI-AGE CHICKEN FARM [J].
BARR, DA ;
KELLY, AP ;
BADMAN, RT ;
CAMPEY, AR ;
OROURKE, MD ;
GRIX, DC ;
REECE, RL .
AUSTRALIAN VETERINARY JOURNAL, 1986, 63 (06) :195-196
[4]   CHARACTERIZATION OF VIRULENT AND AVIRULENT A-CHICKEN-PENNSYLVANIA-83 INFLUENZA-A VIRUSES - POTENTIAL ROLE OF DEFECTIVE INTERFERING RNAS IN NATURE [J].
BEAN, WJ ;
KAWAOKA, Y ;
WOOD, JM ;
PEARSON, JE ;
WEBSTER, RG .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 1985, 54 (01) :151-160
[5]   The avian influenza epidemic in Italy, 1999-2000: a review [J].
Capua, I ;
Marangon, S .
AVIAN PATHOLOGY, 2000, 29 (04) :289-294
[6]   The challenge of avian influenza to the veterinary community [J].
Capua, Ilaria ;
Alexander, Dennis J. .
AVIAN PATHOLOGY, 2006, 35 (03) :189-205
[7]  
*DEP ENV FOOD RUR, 2007, OUTBR HIGHL PATH H5N
[8]   Within-flock mortality during the high-pathogenicity avian influenza (H7N7) epidemic in the Netherlands in 2003: Implications for an early detection system [J].
Elbers, A. R. W. ;
Holtslag, J. B. ;
Bouma, A. ;
Koch, G. .
AVIAN DISEASES, 2007, 51 (01) :304-308
[9]   Performance of clinical signs in poultry for the detection of outbreaks during the avian influenza A (H7N7) epidemic in The Netherlands in 2003 [J].
Elbers, ARW ;
Koch, G ;
Bourna, A .
AVIAN PATHOLOGY, 2005, 34 (03) :181-187
[10]   The highly pathogenic avian influenza A (H7N7) virus epidemic in the Netherlands in 2003 - Lessons learned from the first five outbreaks [J].
Elbers, ARW ;
Fabri, THF ;
de Vries, TS ;
de Wit, JJ ;
Pijpers, A ;
Koch, G .
AVIAN DISEASES, 2004, 48 (03) :691-705