Department of Pathology, Microbiology, and Immunology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, Davis, California, USA.
School of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA.
Transbound Emerg Dis. 2022 Sep;69(5):2412-2423. doi: 10.1111/tbed.14197. Epub 2021 Jul 15.
Oocyst shedding in domestic and wild felids is a critical yet understudied topic in Toxoplasma gondii ecology and epidemiology that shapes human and animal disease burden. We synthesized published literature dating from the discovery of felids as the definitive hosts of T. gondii in the 1960s through March 2021 to examine shedding prevalence, oocyst genotypes, and risk factors for shedding. Oocyst shedding prevalence in many geographic regions exceeded the commonly accepted 1% reported for domestic cats; crude prevalence from cross-sectional field studies of domestic cat shedding ranged from 0% in Australia to 18.8% in Africa, with greater variation in reports of oocyst shedding in free-ranging, wild felids. Shedding in wild felid species has primarily been described in captive animals, with attempted detection of oocyst shedding reported in at least 31 species. Differences in lifestyle and diet play an important role in explaining shedding variation between free-ranging unowned domestic cats, owned domestic cats and wild felids. Additional risk factors for shedding include the route of infection, diet, age and immune status of the host. It is widely reported that cats only shed oocysts after initial infection with T. gondii, but experimental studies have shown that repeat oocyst shedding can occur. Factors associated with repeat shedding are common amongst free-ranging felids (domestic and wild), which are more likely to eat infected prey, be exposed to diverse T. gondii genotypes, and have coinfections with other parasites. Repeat shedding events could play a significant yet currently ignored role in shaping environmental oocyst loading with implications for human and animal exposure. Oocyst presence in the environment is closely linked to climate variables such as temperature and precipitation, so in quantifying risk of exposure, it is important to consider the burden of T. gondii oocysts that can accumulate over time in diverse environmental matrices and sites, as well as the spatial heterogeneity of free-ranging cat populations. Key directions for future research include investigating oocyst shedding in under-sampled regions, genotyping of oocysts detected in faeces and longitudinal studies of oocyst shedding in free-ranging felids.
在刚地弓形虫的生态学和流行病学中,家猫和野生猫科动物的卵囊排放是一个重要但研究不足的课题,它影响着人类和动物的疾病负担。我们综合了自 20 世纪 60 年代发现猫科动物为刚地弓形虫的终末宿主以来至 2021 年 3 月发表的文献,以检验卵囊排放的流行率、卵囊基因型和排放的风险因素。在许多地理区域,卵囊排放的流行率超过了人们普遍接受的家猫 1%的报告率;对家猫卵囊排放的横断面野外研究报告显示,从澳大利亚的 0%到非洲的 18.8%,自由放养的野生猫科动物卵囊排放的报告差异更大。野生猫科动物的卵囊排放主要在圈养动物中得到描述,至少有 31 个物种报告了卵囊排放的尝试检测。生活方式和饮食的差异在解释自由放养的无主家猫、家猫和野生猫科动物之间的排放差异方面起着重要作用。卵囊排放的其他风险因素包括感染途径、饮食、宿主的年龄和免疫状态。人们广泛报道猫只有在初次感染刚地弓形虫后才会排放卵囊,但实验研究表明,重复排放卵囊是可能的。与重复排放相关的因素在自由放养的猫科动物(家猫和野生猫)中很常见,它们更有可能吃受感染的猎物,接触到不同的刚地弓形虫基因型,并与其他寄生虫合并感染。重复排放事件可能在塑造环境卵囊负荷方面发挥重要但目前被忽视的作用,对人类和动物的暴露有影响。卵囊在环境中的存在与温度和降水等气候变量密切相关,因此在量化暴露风险时,重要的是要考虑到随时间在不同环境基质和地点积累的刚地弓形虫卵囊的负担,以及自由放养的猫科动物种群的空间异质性。未来研究的关键方向包括调查抽样不足地区的卵囊排放、粪便中检测到的卵囊的基因分型以及自由放养的猫科动物卵囊排放的纵向研究。