Integrating contact tracing and whole- genome sequencing to track the elimination of dog-mediated rabies: An observational and genomic study
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Date
2023-05-25Author
Lushasi, Kennedy
Brunker, Kirstyn
Rajeev, Malavika
Ferguson, Elaine
Jaswant, Gurdeep
Baker, Laurie
Biek, Roman
Changalucha, Joel
Cleaveland, Sarah
Czupryna, Anna
Fooks, Anthony
Govella, Nicodemus
Haydon, Daniel
Johnson, Paul
Kazwala, Rudovick
Lembo, Tiziana
Masoud, Msanif
Maziku, Matthew
Mbunda, Eberhard
Mchau, Geofrey
Mohamed, Ally
Mpolya, Emmanuel
Ngeleja, Chanasa
Ng'habi, Kija
Nonga, Hezron
Omar, Kassim
Rysava, Kristyna
Sambo, Maganga
Sikana, Lwitiko
Steenson, Rachel
Hampson, Katie
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background:
Dog-mediated rabies is endemic across Africa causing thousands of human deaths annually. A One Health approach to rabies is advocated, comprising emergency post-exposure vaccination of bite victims and mass dog vaccination to break the transmission cycle. However, the impacts and cost-effectiveness of these components are difficult to disentangle.
Methods:
We combined contact tracing with whole-genome sequencing to track rabies transmission in the animal reservoir and spillover risk to humans from 2010 to 2020, investigating how the components of a One Health approach reduced the disease burden and eliminated rabies from Pemba Island, Tanzania. With the resulting high-resolution spatiotemporal and genomic data, we inferred transmission chains and estimated case detection. Using a decision tree model, we quantified the public health burden and evaluated the impact and cost-effectiveness of interventions over a 10-year time horizon.
Results:
We resolved five transmission chains co-circulating on Pemba from 2010 that were all eliminated by May 2014. During this period, rabid dogs, human rabies exposures and deaths all progressively declined following initiation and improved implementation of annual islandwide dog vaccination. We identified two introductions to Pemba in late 2016 that seeded re-emergence after dog vaccination had lapsed. The ensuing outbreak was eliminated in October 2018 through reinstated islandwide dog vaccination. While post-exposure vaccines were projected to be highly cost-effective ($256 per death averted), only dog vaccination interrupts transmission. A combined One Health approach of routine annual dog vaccination together with free post-exposure vaccines for bite victims, rapidly eliminates rabies, is highly cost-effective ($1657 per death averted) and by maintaining rabies freedom prevents over 30 families from suffering traumatic rabid dog bites annually on Pemba island.
Conclusions:
A One Health approach underpinned by dog vaccination is an efficient, cost-effective, equitable, and feasible approach to rabies elimination, but needs scaling up across connected populations to sustain the benefits of elimination, as seen on Pemba, and for similar progress to be achieved elsewhere.