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Livestock abortion surveillance in Tanzania reveals disease priorities and importance of timely collection of vaginal swab samples for attribution

Lankester, Felix; Kibona, Tito J; Allan, Kathryn J; de Glanville, William; Buza, Joram J; Katzer, Frank; Halliday, Jo E; Mmbaga, Blandina T; Wheelhouse, Nick; Innes, Elisabeth A; Thomas, Kate M; Nyasebwa, Obed M; Swai, Emanuel; Claxton, John R; Cleaveland, Sarah

Authors

Felix Lankester

Tito J Kibona

Kathryn J Allan

William de Glanville

Joram J Buza

Frank Katzer

Jo E Halliday

Blandina T Mmbaga

Elisabeth A Innes

Kate M Thomas

Obed M Nyasebwa

Emanuel Swai

John R Claxton

Sarah Cleaveland



Abstract

Lack of data on the aetiology of livestock diseases constrains effective interventions to improve livelihoods, food security and public health. Livestock abortion is an important disease syndrome affecting productivity and public health. Several pathogens are associated with livestock abortions but across Africa surveillance data rarely include information from abortions, little is known about aetiology and impacts, and data are not available to inform interventions. This paper describes outcomes from a surveillance platform established in Tanzania spanning pastoral, agropastoral and smallholder systems to investigate causes and impacts of livestock abortion. Abortion events were reported by farmers to livestock field officers (LFO) and on to investigation teams. Events were included if the research team or LFO could attend within 72 hr. If so, samples and questionnaire data were collected to investigate (a) determinants of attribution; (b) patterns of events, including species and breed, previous abortion history, and seasonality; (c) determinants of reporting, investigation and attribution; (d) cases involving zoonotic pathogens. Between 2017–2019, 215 events in cattle (n=71), sheep (n=44), and goats (n=100) were investigated. Attribution, achieved for 19.5% of cases, was significantly affected by delays in obtaining samples. Histopathology proved less useful than PCR due to rapid deterioration of samples. Vaginal swabs provided practical and sensitive material for pathogen detection. Livestock abortion surveillance, even at a small scale, can generate valuable information on causes of disease outbreaks, reproductive losses and can identify pathogens not easily captured through other forms of livestock disease surveillance. This study demonstrated the feasibility of establishing a surveillance system, achieved through engagement of community-based field officers, establishment of practical sample collection and application of molecular diagnostic platforms.

Citation

Lankester, F., Kibona, T. J., Allan, K. J., de Glanville, W., Buza, J. J., Katzer, F., Halliday, J. E., Mmbaga, B. T., Wheelhouse, N., Innes, E. A., Thomas, K. M., Nyasebwa, O. M., Swai, E., Claxton, J. R., & Cleaveland, S. (in press). Livestock abortion surveillance in Tanzania reveals disease priorities and importance of timely collection of vaginal swab samples for attribution. eLife, 13, RP95296. https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.95296

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 18, 2024
Online Publication Date Dec 16, 2024
Deposit Date Jan 10, 2025
Publicly Available Date Jan 10, 2025
Journal eLife
Electronic ISSN 2050-084X
Publisher eLife Sciences Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 13
Pages RP95296
DOI https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.95296
Keywords Other, zoonoses, PCR, syndromic surveillance, Tanzania, community-based, livestock abortion

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Publisher Licence URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Copyright Statement
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.





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