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Co-infection with Rift Valley fever virus, Brucella spp. and Coxiella burnetii in humans and animals in Kenya: Disease burden and ecological factors
1. Co-infection with Rift Valley fever virus, Brucella spp
and Coxiella burnetii in humans and animals in
Kenya: Disease burden and ecological factors
Bernard Bett
International Livestock Research Institute
Inaugural workshop of a bio-surveillance project on Rift Valley fever, brucellosis and Q fever
Nairobi, Kenya, 3 September 2019
2. Institution
International Livestock Research Institute Bernard Bett, Sam Oyola, Johanna Lindahl,
veterinary epidemiologists, Elisha Mutinda, Stella
Ikileng
Washington State University (WSU) Kariuki Njenga, microbiologist
Zoonosis Disease Unit/Ministry of
Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries
Mathew Muturi, veterinary epidemiologist
Zoonosis Disease Unit/Ministry of Health Athman Mwatondo, medical epidemiologist
Kenya Wildlife Service Francis Gakuya, Wildlife veterinarian and scientist
Los Alamos National Laboratory Patrick Chain, Jeanne Fair, Tracy Erkkila
(molecular scientists), Andrew Bartlow, postdoc
scientist
University of Nairobi Joshua Amimo, molecular scientist, Sally Bukachi,
anthropologist
Kenya Medical Research Institute Konongoi Limbaso, Victor Ofula, Lubano Kizito
3. • Three-year bio-surveillance study in northeastern Kenya
o Rift Valley fever virus, Brucella spp. and Coxiella burnetii
o All are priority zoonotic pathogens in Kenya (ZDU)
• Components:
o Retrospective analysis of archived human and animal samples from
various sources – risk mapping
o Active surveillance for these agents in selected humans, livestock
and wildlife – estimate burden
o Genotyping isolated pathogens – characterize pathogens
o Biosafety and biosecurity trainings will also be offered to key
personnel - first line responders, animal and human health workers
and wildlife personnel - build capacity
• This project contributes to objectives of C-WMD by:
o Establishing the burden of these pathogens and defining their
ecological drivers to inform interventions
o Building capacity on biosafety and biosecurity practices
The project
4. 4
• ILRI – overall implementation and reporting
• Zoonosis Disease Unit – surveillance in animals and humans
• Kenya Wildlife Service – surveillance in wildlife
• Kenya Medical Research Institute – biosafety and biosecurity training/human health research
• Washington State university – Serology of stored serum samples
• Los Alamos National Laboratory – Sequencing and bioinformatics
• University of Nairobi – anthropology/gender studies
Key Partners and regions of study
5. 5
Year 1: September 2019 – August 2020
• Conduct biosafety and biosecurity trainings
• Complete serological analyses of stored human, livestock and wildlife
samples
• Develop risk maps for the three target pathogens
• Select study areas for bio-surveillance work
Year 2: September 2020 – August 2021
• Commence bio-surveillance activities (field and laboratory work)
• Conduct metagenomic and phylogenetic analyses of detected pathogens
• Train local researchers on metagenomic and phylogenetic analyses
Year 3: September 2021 – August 2022
• Complete bio-surveillance activities (field and laboratory work)
• Complete metagenomic and phylogenetic analyses of detected pathogens
• Conduct severity studies in humans
Timeline and major milestones
Project overview
6. Communication plan – 1st quarter
• Internal communications
• External communications
• Risk communication
Data management plan
• Identify all the sources of data, data types, formats, storage
• Data sharing and roles
Animal use and ethics
• Commenced filling out the requisite forms
• Compliance monitoring
Project management tools
7.
8. Task 1: Risk mapping of RVFv, Brucella spp. and C. burnetii based on analysis of
stored serum samples
• Objective
o To develop risk maps for RVFv, Brucella spp. and Coxiella burnetii based on serological analysis of
stored serum samples
• Background
o Maps of disease distribution/intensity useful for:
Visualizing the extent and magnitude of a public health problem
Evaluating advantages and disadvantages of alternative surveillance and control options
Documenting baseline levels of disease before an intervention is conducted
o Maps of RVF have been produced, but requires refinement. Development of maps for brucellosis
using DDSR data -- ongoing. No plans have been made to map Q fever
o However, maps based on disease outbreaks/clinical cases alone (such as those for RVF) have some
limitations – biased to conditions that favour “disease presence”, and hence low predictive power
o Serological data – added advantage of identifying areas where endemic transmissions occur
o A comparison of various types of maps – based on serological data, disease occurrence,
vulnerability indices provide useful insights on the distribution of disease risk
Prof. Njenga Kariuki, WSU
9. Task 1: Risk mapping
• Approach:
o Prepare an inventory of projects that have collected serum samples in livestock, human
and wildlife throughout the country and establish required partnerships for the work
o Review the list of samples that are available and select a subset based on
predetermined criteria such as:
- Sample storage conditions
- Geographical regions covered
- Ethical approvals
Number of samples required: ~2000 each from humans and cattle, and wildlife samples that will be
available
o Conduct serological analyses for all the three pathogens
o Use spatial statistical analyses to generate risk maps – considering current socio-
ecological scenarios and those for the future 30 – 50 years based on predicted changes
in climate, land use change and socio-economic scenarios
o Disseminate risk maps through journal publications, stakeholder meetings and
conferences, trainings e.g. those for FELTP
10. Task 1: Risk mapping
• Schedule:
o Year 1
• Output:
o Refined risk maps for each pathogen for the current and future (30 – 50 years)
11. Task 2a: Burden of of RVFv, Brucella spp. and C. burnetii in livestock
• Objectives
o To determine the incidence and risk factors for RVFv, Brucella spp. and C. burnetii in
single/joint infections in livestock in selected counties in northern Kenya
o To estimate economic impacts associated with these diseases in these livestock production
systems
• Background
o Multiple cross-sectional serological studies on RVFv, Brucella spp. and C. burnetii have been
done in various parts of the county
o Prevalence estimates obtained – variable, ranging 3 – 20%. RVFv prevalence often higher in
cattle while Q fever often higher in goats
o Data gaps – incidence, drivers and socio-economic impacts to determine burden to individual
diseases as well as their co-infections
o Evidence from recent studies show these diseases co-occur either at the host or area levels
Dr. Mathew Muturi, ZDU/DVS
12. Task 2a: Burden in livestock
• Approach:
o Characterization and selection of study villages (n = 22) in 4 counties - Isiolo,
Marsabit, Wajir, Garissa
- Sample size estimated using standard epidemiological approaches
- Field visits to all the target counties to obtain background information for site selection
- Collation of secondary/surveillance data
- Participatory epidemiological studies to obtain perceptions on the prevalence of these
diseases from pastoral communities
o Establish active surveillance teams at each county.
- 1 vet, 2 AHAs and 6 community disease reporters per county to cover 6 villages
- ZDU unit – technical team to lead biological sampling
o Active surveillance
- Selected villages will be put under active surveillance for one year
- Syndromic surveillance and biological sampling
13. Task 2a: Burden in livestock
• Approach:
o Syndromic surveillance
- Sensitize communities on lay case definition for cases of interest
- Develop SMS codes or USSD lines which communities can report cases
- Routine visits to the study sites by AHAs (motor-bikes to be provided)
- Vets collect reported syndromes and post them to an on-line portal managed by DVS
o Biological sampling
- Systematic random sampling of every 10th case that fits the case definition for sampling
- ZDU team – visit for sample collection based on reports received from the county vets
- All the required metadata will be collected on the host, household, village at the time of
sampling
- All samples will be screened using ELISA tests and those that turn positive will be screened
further with PCR at ILRI
o Data management and analysis
- A relational database will be established and shared with all the partners
- The database will contain scripts for automated analyses to show trends
- Other datasets from meteorological department, census, on-line GIS databases will be
collated for multivariable analyses
14. Task 2a: Burden in livestock
• Schedule:
o Year 1 – selection of study sites
o Year 2 – commencement of longitudinal surveillance study
o Year 3 – completion of longitudinal surveillance study
• Outputs:
o Estimates of burden attributable to the target pathogens as well as their co-infections
o Refinement of the existing surveillance systems at the county level
15. Task 2b: Occurrence patterns of RVFv, Brucella spp. and C. burnetii in
wildlife
• Objectives
o To determine the prevalence and occurrence patterns of RVFv, Brucella spp. and C. burnetii in
various species of wildlife in selected counties in northern Kenya
• Background
o About 5% and 11% of buffaloes have been found to have both Brucella spp. and C. burnetii
and RVFv/C. burnetii antibodies (Cook et al., 2017)
o Other hosts that can act as reservoirs for these pathogens are wildebeests, various antelopes
e.g. impalas, etc. A lot of effort has particularly been directed at identifying wildlife reservoirs
for RVF
o Interaction between livestock and wildlife is common in pastoral communities and back-and-
forth transmission of these pathogens is thought to occur routinely
o Knowledge on occurrence patterns of these pathogens in livestock, and their transmission
patterns between wildlife and livestock is relevant for surveillance and control policies
Dr. Francis Gakuya, KWS
16. Task 2b: EDPs in wildlife
• Approach:
oParticipate in the selection of the study sites
oSurveillance plan: opportunistic sampling of clinical cases identified from
KLWSS and affected animals will be captured and sampled
Opportunistic sampling
- The DVS works with the KWS on disease surveillance under the KLWSS
- Cases in wildlife with abortion, emaciation, weakness, and fever and other related
disease syndromes will be sampled and screened for these pathogens using ELISA and
PCR kits at ILRI
- Routine procedures for immobilizing animals will be used
Capture and sampling of target species (Active surveillance – longitudinal studies)
o Data management and analysis
17. Task 2b: EDPs in wildlife
• Schedule:
o Year 1 – selection of study sites
o Year 2 – commencement of longitudinal surveillance study
o Year 3 – completion of longitudinal surveillance study
• Output:
o Prevalence of EDPs in selected wildlife species
18. Task 2c: Burden of of RVFv, Brucella spp. and C. burnetii in humans
• Objectives
o To determine the incidence and risk factors for RVFv, Brucella spp. and C. burnetii in
single/joint infections in humans in selected counties in northern Kenya
o To determine whether the severity of illness varies with pathogen strains and number of EDP
infections observed
• Background
o The prevalence of RVFv, Brucella spp. and C. burnetii in pastoral areas in Kenya is quite high.
A study conducted by Osoro et al. showed a high prevalence of >40% of brucellosis in
humans
o A strong association between the presence of livestock and human seropositive cases at the
household and area levels – an observation that can be used to design One Health
surveillance
o No studies have been done to determine the incidence of these diseases and their impacts
on human health – this can aid decision making, especially on levels of investments required
to mitigate health impacts
Dr. Athman Mwatondo, ZDU/MoH
19. Task 2c: Burden in humans
• Approach:
o Characterization and selection of study areas
- Field visits to all the target counties to obtain background information for site selection
- Collation of secondary/surveillance data
- Participatory epidemiological studies to obtain perceptions on the prevalence of these diseases from
pastoral communities
o Establish surveillance facilities
- 11 facilities will be used as sentinel units
- 2 clinicians will be engaged in each unit to help with subject identification and sampling
- The units will have dry shippers for temporary storage of collected samples
o Subject identification
- Non-malaria cases with fever (>37.5C), with headache, muscle and/or joint pains
- Above 5 years of age and not suffering from traumatic conditions or chronic conditions, organ failure or
heart disease
- One in five cases will be selected for sampling and the standard procedures for consenting process will
be followed
- All samples collected will be screened with ELISA kits while those that turn positive will be screened
further with PCR at KEMRI
20. Task 2c: Burden in humans
• Approach:
o Severity of infection
- A total of 224 subjects will be selected for severity study. Groups to be considered are:
o Those testing negative for all pathogens
o RVFv positive cases only
o Brucella spp. cases only
o Coxiella burnetii cases only
o Subjects with mixed infections
- Severity scores will be generated based on severity of clinical signs and haematological parameters at weekly
intervals (Table below)
Clinical sign Score
None Mild Moderate Severe Total
0 1 2 3
Fever
Headache
Abdominal pain
Joint pains/myalgia
Fatigue
Temperature gradient based on thermometer readings
Mild/intermittent – throbbing headache -- chronic headache
Mild/no major consequence - acute – chronic/longstanding
Mild – moderate – severe with loss of function
Fatigue questionnaire
21. Task 2c: Burden in humans
• Schedule:
o Year 1 – selection of facilities
o Year 2 – commencement of longitudinal surveillance study
o Year 3 – completion of longitudinal surveillance study
• Outputs:
o Estimates of health burden attributable to the target pathogens as well as their co-infections
in humans
o Refinement of One Health surveillance systems
22. Task 2d: Socio-economics and gender studies
• Objective
o To determine socio-economic practices that promote exposure to each of the pathogens
o To determine how to incentivise local communities and other relevant institutions for
improved EDP surveillance
• Background
o Social factors influence exposure and vulnerability to zoonotic diseases
o Exposure factors include: livelihood practices e.g. herding animals, milking, slaughtering,
food preparation, etc. Determinants of vulnerability include access to health services,
poverty, education levels, etc.
o There is potential to reduce human exposure through KAP interventions but a recent study in
Kenya showed that community trainings improved knowledge but not practices on RVF
o Uptake of control measures also influenced by gender and socio-economic factors
23. Task 2d: Socio-economic studies
• Approach:
o Questionnaire surveys before, during and shortly after the longitudinal
studies at quarterly intervals. Questions will aim to identify exposure factors
o Community sensitization activities as part of the communication plan.
Feedback messaging through USSD/short SMS services will be piloted
oData analysis
- Descriptive statistics and risk factor analyses
- Agent-based modelling which relates livelihood activities and EDP risk
- Extrapolation of risk to population level for socio-economic impact assessments
24. Task 2d: Socio-economic studies
• Schedule:
o Year 2 – commencement of longitudinal surveillance study
o Year 3 – completion of longitudinal surveillance study
• Output:
o Identification of socio-economic factors influencing exposure to EDPs
o Identification of incentives for surveillance at community and county levels
25. Task 3: Sequencing, metagenomics, and bioinformatics
• Objective
o Metagenomic and phylogenetic analyses of detected EDPs and training to improve the capacity of local
researchers on sequencing and molecular techniques for EDP surveillance
• Approach
o Subset of positive samples will be subjected to Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) and a series of analyses
o 56 human samples, 88 livestock samples, and 45 wildlife samples
o Pathogens will be detected using GOTTCHA2, KRAKEN, PanGIA in EDGE
o EDP genotypes will be assessed to give information on the diversity and distribution of each genotype
o Phylogenies of each EDP will be inferred
o Host microbiomes will be analysed using various statistical methods
• Outputs
o Confirmation of PCR pathogen detection
o Information on additional pathogens not assayed for by PCR
o Phylogenies for each EDP with whole genome sequencing
o Host microbiome characterization
• Schedule
o Years 2 and 3
26. Task 4: Biosafety and biosecurity trainings
• Objective
o To build capacity on biosafety and biosecurity practices among human and animal health
workers across the target counties
• Background
o The target pathogens present a lot of risk to human and animal health workers especially in
pastoral areas
o These workers, being the frontline staff, play a major role in the control of these pathogens
o Training manuals on biosafety and biosecurity practices have been developed and are
available for use
Dr. Victor Ofula, KEMRI
27. Task 4: Biosafety and biosecurity trainings
• Approach
o Refine the existing training materials with inputs from experts from Sandia Laboratories who
have been involved in ToT trainings in the country
o Work with counties to select 10 – 16 people to be trained per county (Wajir, Mandera,
Garissa, Isiolo, Isiolo)
o Administer a pre-training KAP assessment to be used later for assessing impact of training
o Offer trainings to groups of 20 participants – mixed groups of public and animal health
professionals to promote interdisciplinary interactions during trainings
o Conduct post-training KAP assessments
o Conduct statistical analyses to determine impact of training
28. Task 4: Biosafety and biosecurity trainings
• Schedule:
o Year 1 – selection of facilities
• Output:
o Improved knowledge and practices on biosafety and biosecurity practices among public and
animal health workers
29.
30. Role of counties in the project
• Implementation of the project:
oRequired approvals for the project to be implemented on the ground
oIdentification of surveillance sites – villages, health centers, parks
oApprove participation of staff in the project
oParticipate in trainings – e.g. biosafety and biosecurity
• Utilization of research outputs
• Participation in review workshops and scientific conferences