Literature detail

Spillover and pandemic properties of zoonotic viruses with high host plasticity.

Christine Kreuder Johnson1 Peta L Hitchens1 Tierra Smiley Evans1 Tracey Goldstein1 Kate Thomas1 Andrew Clements2 Damien O Joly3 Nathan D Wolfe3 Peter Daszak4 William B Karesh4 Jonna K Mazet1
Affiliations 4 institutions
  1. One Health Institute, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, CA USA.
  2. USAID, Bureau for Global Health, Washington DC, USA.
  3. Metabiota, San Francisco, CA USA.
  4. EcoHealth Alliance, New York, NY USA.
PMID 26445169 2015 Sci Rep eng epublish
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Article

Publication summary

Most human infectious diseases, especially recently emerging pathogens, originate from animals, and ongoing disease transmission from animals to people presents a significant global health burden. Recognition of the epidemiologic circumstances involved in zoonotic spillover, amplification, and spread of diseases is essential for prioritizing surveillance and predicting future disease emergence risk. We examine the animal hosts and transmission mechanisms involved in spillover of zoonotic viruses to date, and discover that viruses with high host plasticity (i.e. taxonomically and ecologically diverse host range) were more likely to amplify viral spillover by secondary human-to-human transmission and have broader geographic spread. Viruses transmitted to humans during practices that facilitate mixing of diverse animal species had significantly higher host plasticity. Our findings suggest that animal-to-human spillover of new viruses that are capable of infecting diverse host species signal emerging disease events with higher pandemic potential in that these viruses are more likely to amplify by human-to-human transmission with spread on a global scale.

Genome, Viral Host Specificity Pandemics Africa Americas Animals Asia Communicable Diseases, Emerging Epidemiological Monitoring Human Activities Humans Multivariate Analysis Virus Diseases Viruses Zoonoses

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

1 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

The study identifies animal-to-human spillover of zoonotic viruses as the initiating event in disease emergence, particularly for viruses with broad host range.

Virus
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We examine the animal hosts and transmission mechanisms involved in spillover of zoonotic viruses to date, and discover that viruses with high host plasticity ... were more likely to amplify viral spillover by secondary human-to-human transmission.

Method
epidemiologic review; multivariate analysis
Study design
comparative analysis
Transmission direction
animal-to-human