Pintar Katarina D M, Christidis Tanya, Thomas M Kate, Anderson Maureen, Nesbitt Andrea, Keithlin Jessica, Marshall Barbara, Pollari Frank
Centre for Foodborne, Environmental and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Public Health Agency of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs, Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2015 Dec 18;10(12):e0144976. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0144976. eCollection 2015.
Animal contact is a potential transmission route for campylobacteriosis, and both domestic household pet and petting zoo exposures have been identified as potential sources of exposure. Research has typically focussed on the prevalence, concentration, and transmission of zoonoses from farm animals to humans, yet there are gaps in our understanding of these factors among animals in contact with the public who don't live on or visit farms. This study aims to quantify, through a systematic review and meta-analysis, the prevalence and concentration of Campylobacter carriage in household pets and petting zoo animals. Four databases were accessed for the systematic review (PubMed, CAB direct, ProQuest, and Web of Science) for papers published in English from 1992-2012, and studies were included if they examined the animal population of interest, assessed prevalence or concentration with fecal, hair coat, oral, or urine exposure routes (although only articles that examined fecal routes were found), and if the research was based in Canada, USA, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand. Studies were reviewed for qualitative synthesis and meta-analysis by two reviewers, compiled into a database, and relevant studies were used to create a weighted mean prevalence value. There were insufficient data to run a meta-analysis of concentration values, a noted study limitation. The mean prevalence of Campylobacter in petting zoo animals is 6.5% based on 7 studies, and in household pets the mean is 24.7% based on 34 studies. Our estimated concentration values were: 7.65x103cfu/g for petting zoo animals, and 2.9x105cfu/g for household pets. These results indicate that Campylobacter prevalence and concentration are lower in petting zoo animals compared with household pets and that both of these animal sources have a lower prevalence compared with farm animals that do not come into contact with the public. There is a lack of studies on Campylobacter in petting zoos and/or fair animals in Canada and abroad. Within this literature, knowledge gaps were identified, and include: a lack of concentration data reported in the literature for Campylobacter spp. in animal feces, a distinction between ill and diarrheic pets in the reported studies, noted differences in shedding and concentrations for various subtypes of Campylobacter, and consistent reporting between studies.
接触动物是弯曲菌病的一种潜在传播途径,家庭宠物接触和宠物动物园接触均已被确定为潜在的接触源。研究通常聚焦于人畜共患病从农场动物向人类的流行率、浓度及传播情况,然而,对于那些不住在农场或不参观农场却与公众接触的动物,我们对这些因素的了解还存在空白。本研究旨在通过系统评价和荟萃分析,量化家庭宠物和宠物动物园动物中弯曲杆菌携带的流行率和浓度。为进行系统评价,检索了四个数据库(PubMed、CAB direct、ProQuest和Web of Science),查找1992年至2012年发表的英文论文,若研究涉及目标动物群体、通过粪便、毛发、口腔或尿液接触途径评估流行率或浓度(尽管仅找到研究粪便途径的文章),且研究基于加拿大、美国、欧洲、澳大利亚和新西兰,则纳入研究。由两名评审员对研究进行定性综合和荟萃分析,整理成数据库,并使用相关研究创建加权平均流行率值。浓度值的荟萃分析数据不足,这是该研究的一个明显局限性。基于7项研究,宠物动物园动物中弯曲杆菌的平均流行率为6.5%;基于34项研究,家庭宠物中弯曲杆菌的平均流行率为24.7%。我们估计的浓度值为:宠物动物园动物为7.65×10³cfu/g,家庭宠物为2.9×10⁵cfu/g。这些结果表明,与家庭宠物相比,宠物动物园动物中弯曲杆菌的流行率和浓度较低,并且与不接触公众的农场动物相比,这两种动物源的流行率均较低。加拿大国内外关于宠物动物园和/或集市动物中弯曲杆菌的研究较少。在这些文献中,发现了知识空白,包括:文献中缺乏动物粪便中弯曲杆菌属的浓度数据、报告研究中患病宠物和腹泻宠物的区分、弯曲杆菌不同亚型在脱落和浓度方面的显著差异以及研究之间的一致报告。