Literature detail

Novel variant Hendra virus genotype 2 infection in a horse in the greater Newcastle region, New South Wales, Australia.

Joanne Taylor1,2 Kirrilly Thompson1,2 Edward J Annand3,4 Peter D Massey1 Jane Bennett5 John-Sebastian Eden3,6 Bethany A Horsburgh3,6 Evelyn Hodgson7 Kelly Wood5 James Kerr8 Peter Kirkland9 Deborah Finlaison9 Alison J Peel10 Peggy Eby10,11 David N Durrheim1,2
Affiliations 11 institutions
  1. Hunter New England Local Health District, Wallsend 2287, Australia.
  2. University of Newcastle, School of Public Health, Medicine and Well-being, Callaghan 2308, Australia.
  3. University of Sydney, Sydney Institute for Infectious Diseases & Sydney School of Veterinary Science, Sydney 2006, Australia.
  4. EquiEpiVet, Equine Veterinary and One Health Epidemiology, Aireys Inlet 3231, Australia.
  5. New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, Orange 2800, Australia.
  6. Westmead Institute for Medical Research, Centre for Virus Research, Sydney 2145, Australia.
  7. Newcastle Equine Centre, Broadmeadow 2292, Australia.
  8. Hunter Local Land Services, Tocal 2421, Australia.
  9. Elizabeth Macarthur Agricultural Institute, Menangle 2568, Australia.
  10. Griffith University, Centre for Planetary Health and Food Security, Nathan 4111, Australia.
  11. University of New South Wales, Centre for Ecosystem Science, Kensington 2033, Australia.
PMID 36277112 2022 One Health eng epublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

In October 2021, the first contemporary detection of Hendra virus genotype 2 (HeV-g2) was made by veterinary priority disease investigation in a horse near Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia, as part of routine veterinary priority disease surveillance. This discovery followed an update of Hendra virus diagnostic assays following retrospective identification of this variant from 2015 via sentinel emerging infectious disease research, enabling timely detection of this case. The sole infected horse was euthanized in moribund condition. As the southernmost recognised HeV spill-over detection to date, it extends the southern limit of known cases by approximately 95 km. The event occurred near a large urban centre, characterised by equine populations of diverse type, husbandry, and purpose, with low HeV vaccination rates. Urgent multi-agency outbreak response involved risk assessment and monitoring of 11 exposed people and biosecurity management of at-risk animals. No human or additional animal cases were recognised. This One Health investigation highlights need for research on risk perception and strategic engagement to support owners confronted with the death of companion animals and potential human exposure to a high consequence virus. The location and timing of this spill-over event diverging from that established for prototype HeV (HeV-g1), highlight benefit in proactive One Health surveillance and research activities that improve understanding of dynamic transmission and spill-over risks of both HeV genotypic lineages and related but divergent emerging pathogens.

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

A single horse infection with Hendra virus genotype 2 occurred near Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia, in October 2021, with no secondary infections detected after multi-agency outbreak response and human exposure monitoring.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

In October 2021, the first contemporary detection of Hendra virus genotype 2 (HeV-g2) was made by veterinary priority disease investigation in a horse near Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia... The sole infected horse was euthanized... Urgent multi-agency outbreak response involved risk assessment and monitoring of 11 exposed people and biosecurity management of at-risk animals. No human or additional animal cases were recognised.

Method
veterinary priority disease investigation; diagnostic assays; biosecurity management; risk assessment; monitoring
Transmission direction
animal-to-animal
Geographic raw
greater Newcastle region, New South Wales, Australia
Country inferred
Australia
Outbreak time
October 2021
Outbreak scale
1 infected horse; 11 exposed people monitored; no further cases
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.98
Key finding

A spillover of Hendra virus genotype 2 occurred from wildlife reservoirs to a horse in New South Wales, the southernmost detection of this virus.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

In October 2021, the first contemporary detection of Hendra virus genotype 2 (HeV-g2) was made by veterinary priority disease investigation in a horse near Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia... As the southernmost recognised HeV spill-over detection to date, it extends the southern limit of known cases by approximately 95 km.

Method
veterinary disease investigation; diagnostic assays; surveillance
Study design
outbreak investigation
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
greater Newcastle region, New South Wales, Australia
Country inferred
Australia
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Routine veterinary disease surveillance detected Hendra virus genotype 2 in a horse in New South Wales, marking the southernmost recognized spillover and contributing to One Health monitoring of zoonotic risk.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

In October 2021, the first contemporary detection of Hendra virus genotype 2 (HeV-g2) was made by veterinary priority disease investigation in a horse near Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia, as part of routine veterinary priority disease surveillance.

Method
veterinary surveillance; Hendra virus diagnostic assays
Geographic raw
Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia
Country inferred
Australia