Compared with an all-group treatment strategy, the diagnostic-led approach used here considerably reduced application of anticestode anthelmintics. This could reduce selection pressure for anthelmintic resistance.
Strangles is a disease of equids caused by infection with Streptococcus equi subspecies equi (S. equi) and carries significant welfare and commercial consequences, especially in view of its highly contagious nature. 1 Long term 'silent' carriage of infection within guttural pouches is thought to be a significant contributor to persistence of the disease 2,3 as the organism typically only survives for a few days in the environment. 4,5 Indeed, it has even been said that the carrier status of persistent S. equi infection crucially underpins the success of this organism. 6 Consequently, it is common practice in the UK to
Streptococcus equi subspecies equi (S. equi) is the
causative organism of the upper respiratory disease of equids,
strangles, characterised by pyrexia, lymphadenopathy, and mucopurulent
nasal discharge. Strangles was first reported over 750 years ago and
continues to be of significance in equine populations across the globe.
This review discusses how S. equi has adapted, the clinical
manifestation of strangles, and how clinicians and caregivers can tackle
the disease in the future. S. equi evolved from the commensal,
and occasionally opportunistic pathogen, Streptococcus equi
subspecies zooepidemicus refining its capabilities as it became host
restricted. The success of S. equi can be attributed to its
ability to cause both acute and persistent infection, the latter
occurring in about 10% of those infected. In this carrier state,
S. equi persists in the guttural pouch without causing clinical
signs, intermittently shedding into the environment, and encountering
naïve animals. Insight into the S. equi genome and lifestyle has
led to advances in diagnostic assays and the development of a safe and
efficacious recombinant-fusion vaccine, giving clinicians and caregivers
the tools to better combat this infection. Alongside rigorous
biosecurity protocols and pragmatic control measures such as screening
new arrivals for exposure and carrier status, these new technologies
demonstrate that strangles can be an increasingly preventable infection.
Background
Streptococcus equi spp. equi (S. equi), the cause of strangles in horses, is considered a highly contagious pathogen affecting equines and the equine industry worldwide. Fundamental epidemiological characteristics of outbreaks, such as the basic reproduction number (R0), are not well described.
Objectives
Estimate R0 for S. equi in equine populations from outbreak data.
Study design
Systematic review and meta‐analysis of published and unpublished data.
Methods
A literature search for outbreak reports was carried out. Depending on data available in the reports, the early epidemic growth rate or final attack rate (AR) approach was used to estimate the basic reproduction number for that outbreak. Other recorded outbreak characteristics were the type of housing (group vs. individual). An overall estimate for R0 was computed by meta‐analysis.
Results
Data from eight outbreaks were extracted from peer‐reviewed publications. Data from two additional, non‐published outbreaks was also included in the meta‐analysis. A conservative estimate for R0 was 2.2 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.9–2.5). A less conservative estimate, including outbreaks with a 100% AR for which a lower limit R0 was estimated, was 2.7 (95% CI 2.1–3.3).
Main limitations
Few papers describing longitudinal incidence data were found so most estimates were based on the outbreaks' final size. Several outbreaks had a 100% attack rate and could therefore only be included as a lower limit estimate in the meta‐analysis. The reported result therefore may be an underestimation.
Conclusions
This estimate for R0 for S. equi informs parameters for future mathematical modelling, quantifies desired preventive vaccine coverage and helps evaluate the effect of prevention strategies through future modelling studies.
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