日本脑炎在澳大利亚的传播:挑战和未来展望。

IF 6.7 2区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Caroline K Dowsett, Francesca Frentiu, Gregor J Devine, Wenbiao Hu
{"title":"日本脑炎在澳大利亚的传播:挑战和未来展望。","authors":"Caroline K Dowsett,&nbsp;Francesca Frentiu,&nbsp;Gregor J Devine,&nbsp;Wenbiao Hu","doi":"10.5694/mja2.52550","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Japanese encephalitis is caused by the Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV). JEV is the main cause of viral encephalitis in Asia,<span><sup>1</sup></span> and is endemic in many countries on that continent and islands of the Pacific region. Although only a small percentage of cases are symptomatic, 20–30% are fatal and 30–50% develop significant neurological sequelae.<span><sup>2</sup></span> Australia has escaped relatively unscathed, with only a few cases detected in the late 1990s, mostly from international travellers, with local transmission limited to the Torres Strait and Cape York.<span><sup>2, 3</sup></span> The last detection of JEV in Cape York was from feral pigs and an isolate of mosquitoes in 2005. Sentinel animal surveillance in Australia was phased out in 2011 due to costs and labour-intensive maintenance, potential occupational health and safety issues, and concerns about the potential public health risk of using amplifying hosts (pigs), which may contribute to transmission when they become viremic.<span><sup>3</sup></span> Sentinel animal use was replaced by a general mosquito trap-based surveillance system.<span><sup>3</sup></span> The Box provides a timeline of JEV milestones in Australia from the 1990s to 2023, with details on animal and human cases, and corresponding changes in surveillance.</p><p>JEV emerged again in 2021 with a fatal case in the Tiwi Islands, and shortly after was detected on an unprecedented scale and geographical spread in 2022: cases in humans and piggeries were detected across four states in south-eastern Australia (New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia). On 4 March 2022, the Australian Government declared the JEV outbreak a communicable disease incident of national significance.<span><sup>4</sup></span> Over the following months, a total of 46 cases (including 7 deaths) were identified in humans (as of 13 February 2023).<span><sup>5</sup></span> The end of the JEV emergency response was announced on 16 June 2023,<span><sup>6</sup></span> although concern remains regarding potential endemicity in Australian waterbird, pig and mosquito populations.</p><p>JEV is maintained in an enzootic cycle between wading waterbirds and <i>Culex</i> spp mosquitoes and, in some cases, pigs, with spillover to humans and horses.<span><sup>7</sup></span> Birds act as maintenance hosts and can harbour the virus without overt signs of disease. Humans and horses are dead-end hosts and may become infected through the bite of an infectious mosquito. However, dead-end hosts cannot produce virus levels high enough to infect feeding mosquitoes. In Asia, pigs commonly act as amplifying hosts, rapidly multiplying the virus to high levels that can be passed on to susceptible mosquito species, resulting in spillover to humans. There is no evidence of pigs acting as amplifying hosts during the 2021–2023 outbreak in Australia.</p><p>The dominant JEV vector in Australia and parts of the Western Pacific (such as Papua New Guinea) is <i>Culex annulirostris</i>. Although this mosquito is likely the primary vector for the south-eastern Australian outbreak, several other species (including <i>Culex gelidus</i> and <i>Culex sitiens</i>) were implicated in the north Queensland cases in the 1990s and 2000s.<span><sup>8</sup></span></p><p>Australia is one of the most vulnerable regions to climate change globally,<span><sup>9</sup></span> with a projected increased frequency of hotter days and extreme weather events.<span><sup>10</sup></span> A changing climate might further complicate the interactions between JEV vectors, hosts and the environment. Higher rainfall, temperature and levels of evaporation and humidity are risk factors for JEV transmission<span><sup>11</sup></span> and also affect population dynamics of birds, mosquitoes and feral pigs.<span><sup>12</sup></span> However, there are still many unknowns in the Australian context. The effects of changing climatic and environmental factors on JEV spread and emergence in novel locations, transmission dynamics and spatiotemporal patterns, the origins and subsequent distribution pathways of the recent outbreak, the potential competence and biology of vector species in different regions, and the role of feral pigs all require further investigation.</p><p>In temperate parts of Asia, JEV generally follows an epidemic pattern with outbreaks occurring over the warmer seasons, exacerbated by the wet season and pre-harvest periods when rice cultivation occurs.<span><sup>1</sup></span> In Australia, it is expected that JEV will mirror patterns of other endemic encephalitic flaviviruses, particularly the Murray Valley encephalitis virus (MVEV), which is found in northern parts of Australia and has occasional yet substantial outbreaks in temperate Australia over the wet, summer season, coinciding with flooding events around the Murray–Darling Basin.<span><sup>13</sup></span> Published research on JEV in Australia after the 2021–2023 outbreak primarily focuses on identifying potential transmission dynamics, routes of introduction and risk factors<span><sup>12, 14-16</sup></span> (Supporting Information). However, these research efforts suffer from a significant lack of empirical data. Despite these limitations, studies unanimously call for further research and highlight the urgent need for improved surveillance.</p><p>At the time of the 2021–2023 outbreak, the prevailing, passive surveillance system proved futile in detecting JEV circulation in Australia, resulting in cases being detected in pigs and humans at a similar time. The failure put response efforts at a disadvantage and highlighted limitations of surveillance in Australia, which remains fragmented, with only animal health data publicly available with regards to geographic incidence, and human case distribution only detectable by searching the media.<span><sup>12</sup></span> Surveillance is led by a subcommittee of the Communicable Disease Network Australia: the National Arbovirus and Malaria Advisory Committee.<span><sup>17</sup></span> Surveillance is monitored by state and territory, and federal agency members of this committee, along with the Zoonotic Flavivirus Diagnostics Committee (established by the Public Health Network of Australia). JEV surveillance is managed by the different states and territories, with arbovirus and mosquito monitoring reports typically released weekly. These reports include a range of indicators, such as human cases (notified/confirmed and predicted cases), mosquito trapping, serosurveys and, following the onset of the recent outbreak, from 2022 sentinel chicken surveillance was expanded to include JEV.<span><sup>18-20</sup></span> It is expected that most of these surveillance committees will be integrated into the Australian Centre of Disease Control (Australian CDC).</p><p>There is a global movement towards a One Health approach for preparing and responding to zoonotic diseases such as JEV. The One Health approach recognises the interdependent and closely connected health of humans, animals and the environment and uses links between these fields to develop new disease control strategies — from prevention to detection, preparedness, response and management.<span><sup>21</sup></span> Australia has only recently embraced the One Health concept, largely spurred by the recent JEV outbreak.<span><sup>4</sup></span> JEV and other zoonotic diseases are inherently One Health issues, yet existing surveillance systems do not explicitly account for this. The West Nile virus (Kunjin virus subtype) and Ross River virus outbreaks in 2011<span><sup>18, 19</sup></span> demonstrate the need for improved interdisciplinary collaboration. Encouragingly, there is a growing recognition of a One Health approach in Australia,<span><sup>22</sup></span> with the interim Australian CDC and JEV-focused committees and researchers acknowledging this,<span><sup>23</sup></span> and prioritising the approach in the development of the interim Australian CDC and the Australian response to JEV infection and mpox (caused by the monkeypox virus).<span><sup>23</sup></span></p><p>There is a pressing need to shift from a reactive “surveillance and response” approach to a more proactive, comprehensive “predict and prevent” strategy, particularly in regional areas of Australia where populations are at greater risk. As Japanese encephalitis is a vaccine-preventable disease, enhanced surveillance could have potentially prevented the deaths during recent outbreaks.<span><sup>12, 24</sup></span> Given the extensive geographical spread of the JEV outbreak, the high fatality in the MVEV outbreak in recent years in Australia, and the relatively sparse population in these areas posing challenges to surveillance, developing accurate and robust predictive tools based on real-world data is crucial. These tools can streamline preventive public health efforts, especially in regions with limited resources. For example, an early warning system that predicts high risk areas for JEV transmission, incorporating climate and weather, vector, vertebrate and human density and distribution could help initiate and direct targeted interventions such as vaccination campaigns and enhanced surveillance in vulnerable regions.</p><p>The future direction of JEV in Australia can only be speculated, with current research limited by a fragmented surveillance strategy and significant empirical research gaps with regards to transmission, such as the role of feral pigs, bird ecology and infection, and reservoir immunity. The closely linked nature of JEV, MVEV and West Nile virus (Kunjin virus subtype) in Australia, including shared vectors, avian hosts and suitable transmission conditions, as well as limitations in diagnostic testing (particularly in the context of previous infection by one or more of the viruses)<span><sup>22</sup></span> has hindered our understanding of the epidemiology and ecology of these viruses. For example, in 2023, the largest outbreak of MVEV occurred in the Murray–Darling Basin since 1974 with a fatality rate higher than previous outbreaks, but curiously this occurred in the absence of any sign of JEV.<span><sup>18, 19</sup></span> However, the overlap in ecology and transmission of these viruses might provide an opportunity for a more comprehensive surveillance system targeting multiple diseases.</p><p>A thorough surveillance system built on a One Health, multidisciplinary approach that provides high quality, robust data is vital to the containment of outbreaks and rapid initiation of appropriate responses. The proposal and subsequent development of the interim Australian CDC<span><sup>23</sup></span> with a central focus on One Health is welcomed. This is further supported by experts’ calls for a central repository, unified reporting and data linkage system,<span><sup>2</sup></span> and a national agency for coordinating surveillance efforts across Australia. The Australian CDC could provide a key role in facilitating a multidisciplinary data-based central repository as a governing body, steering coordinated surveillance — potentially with a dedicated department for infectious disease surveillance and response.</p><p>A central data repository could further address challenges of fragmentation in available data (including surveillance data), and issues with its organisation across agencies and disciplines in each state and territory. The recent JEV outbreak highlighted the need for improved data sharing agreements and data governance principles, which will provide a platform for rapid, timely risk assessments to inform national outbreak responses, and for use in translational research activities such as real-time, real-world, big data-driven early warning systems.</p><p>There is an urgent need for research in JEV epidemiology and virus transmission dynamics in temporal climates such as south-eastern Australia, particularly for studies demonstrating mosquito–vertebrate host–mosquito transmission to identify and define vertebrate hosts; and to develop long term projections for decision and policy makers. A recent review on early warning systems<span><sup>25</sup></span> proposed the integration of data from other nations to enhance predictive models, which might simultaneously grow research capacity through collaborations with experts and research groups. The review discussed a network for early warning between Australia and China for influenza;<span><sup>25</sup></span> however, in the context of vector-borne diseases such as Japanese encephalitis, the concept could be extended to neighbouring countries, for example Indonesia and Papua New Guinea where potential routes of introduction exist, to broaden surveillance and complement early warning. Although this is not an easy task, it is possible with fruitful collaborations between human and animal health researchers, entomologists, meteorologists, agricultural departments, and other industry agencies associated with JEV.</p><p>A One Health approach centred around interdisciplinary collaboration, with input from practitioners with different yet complementary roles, diverse skills and expertise could optimise outcomes and outbreak preparedness strategies. Some strategies include potential implementation of new innovations and technology such as the development of an Australian xenomonitoring system,<span><sup>26</sup></span> or introducing <i>Wolbachia</i>-based technology<span><sup>27</sup></span> for mosquito control, or further developing sentinel animal programs to improve early detection.</p><p>A pivotal aspect for effective JEV management in Australia is enhancing research capacity for vector-borne diseases. The capacity must be adaptable to the diverse range of vector-borne diseases present in Australia and in neighbouring regions, particularly as climate change increases the suitability of new areas for disease spread. Building research teams that include early and mid-career researchers is essential for ensuring long term sustainability and skill development for future disease management and control. Despite the current challenge of declining research capacity, collaborative efforts across disciplines, possibly facilitated by the CDC as functions and responsibilities shift, could reduce duplication and streamline outcomes and resources. Additionally, the training of early and mid-career researchers in priority areas might be beneficial through establishing CDC-affiliated academic institutions that can fill research gaps and enhance capacity in these critical fields.</p><p>Further investment and funding are key to undertaking research, developing skilled researchers, and ensuring sustainable, productive research outputs, particularly of translational research efforts that promote preparedness and prevention of outbreaks. The Healthy Environments and Lives (HEAL) Network was launched in 2021 after receiving a $10 million grant over five years from the National Health and Medical Research Council Special Initiative in Human Health and Environmental Change, with a major theme of biosecurity and emerging infections addressing multidimensional determinants of infectious diseases and approaches to managing these into the future.<span><sup>28</sup></span> However, considerable and sustained funding is crucial to long term research in climate and environmental change and human health, particularly in infectious diseases. Hopefully, interdisciplinary collaboration and integrated management of JEV will be more efficient and cost-effective, while providing opportunities for joint funding for JEV control and management going forward.</p><p>A large component of the appropriate management of JEV will rely on growing awareness of the virus and educating stakeholders and the public about its transmission dynamics and risk factors. Clear responsibilities for different government departments need to be outlined for effectual policy arrangement and response coordination. Farmers and livestock producers play a key role in disease surveillance and clinical case detection, particularly in pigs, which might facilitate appropriately targeted public health responses. Additionally, general population awareness of risk factors and developing health literacy will position Australia well in responding positively to outbreaks.</p><p>Improving current approaches to surveillance and disease preparedness should build on the strengths of existing systems and infrastructure rather than discarding progress and achievements. Instead, new systems should aim to enhance current models and address their limitations. Australia is in a fortunate position to have the opportunity to learn from international practice in surveillance and disease preparedness as discussions around CDC development progress and should seize this opportunity given the ongoing threat posed by emerging infectious diseases.</p><p>Despite the shortfalls of Australia's response to the recent JEV outbreak, the future of JEV prevention and control in Australia is hopeful, but there is significant work to be done. The need for improved knowledge of JEV transmission dynamics and quality surveillance data cannot be overlooked in developing current preparedness strategies for JEV. Australia is in a particularly opportune position to rethink and restructure current approaches to current disease preparedness strategies, with the development of the Australian CDC — an opportunity that cannot be missed. The recent outbreak of JEV is a clear demonstration of the need for this, especially given that Japanese encephalitis is vaccine preventable, and with timely intervention, such as vaccination, no deaths need occur.</p><p>No relevant disclosures.</p><p>Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.</p>","PeriodicalId":18214,"journal":{"name":"Medical Journal of Australia","volume":"222 2","pages":"58-62"},"PeriodicalIF":6.7000,"publicationDate":"2024-12-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.5694/mja2.52550","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Japanese encephalitis transmission in Australia: challenges and future perspectives\",\"authors\":\"Caroline K Dowsett,&nbsp;Francesca Frentiu,&nbsp;Gregor J Devine,&nbsp;Wenbiao Hu\",\"doi\":\"10.5694/mja2.52550\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Japanese encephalitis is caused by the Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV). JEV is the main cause of viral encephalitis in Asia,<span><sup>1</sup></span> and is endemic in many countries on that continent and islands of the Pacific region. Although only a small percentage of cases are symptomatic, 20–30% are fatal and 30–50% develop significant neurological sequelae.<span><sup>2</sup></span> Australia has escaped relatively unscathed, with only a few cases detected in the late 1990s, mostly from international travellers, with local transmission limited to the Torres Strait and Cape York.<span><sup>2, 3</sup></span> The last detection of JEV in Cape York was from feral pigs and an isolate of mosquitoes in 2005. Sentinel animal surveillance in Australia was phased out in 2011 due to costs and labour-intensive maintenance, potential occupational health and safety issues, and concerns about the potential public health risk of using amplifying hosts (pigs), which may contribute to transmission when they become viremic.<span><sup>3</sup></span> Sentinel animal use was replaced by a general mosquito trap-based surveillance system.<span><sup>3</sup></span> The Box provides a timeline of JEV milestones in Australia from the 1990s to 2023, with details on animal and human cases, and corresponding changes in surveillance.</p><p>JEV emerged again in 2021 with a fatal case in the Tiwi Islands, and shortly after was detected on an unprecedented scale and geographical spread in 2022: cases in humans and piggeries were detected across four states in south-eastern Australia (New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia). On 4 March 2022, the Australian Government declared the JEV outbreak a communicable disease incident of national significance.<span><sup>4</sup></span> Over the following months, a total of 46 cases (including 7 deaths) were identified in humans (as of 13 February 2023).<span><sup>5</sup></span> The end of the JEV emergency response was announced on 16 June 2023,<span><sup>6</sup></span> although concern remains regarding potential endemicity in Australian waterbird, pig and mosquito populations.</p><p>JEV is maintained in an enzootic cycle between wading waterbirds and <i>Culex</i> spp mosquitoes and, in some cases, pigs, with spillover to humans and horses.<span><sup>7</sup></span> Birds act as maintenance hosts and can harbour the virus without overt signs of disease. Humans and horses are dead-end hosts and may become infected through the bite of an infectious mosquito. However, dead-end hosts cannot produce virus levels high enough to infect feeding mosquitoes. In Asia, pigs commonly act as amplifying hosts, rapidly multiplying the virus to high levels that can be passed on to susceptible mosquito species, resulting in spillover to humans. There is no evidence of pigs acting as amplifying hosts during the 2021–2023 outbreak in Australia.</p><p>The dominant JEV vector in Australia and parts of the Western Pacific (such as Papua New Guinea) is <i>Culex annulirostris</i>. Although this mosquito is likely the primary vector for the south-eastern Australian outbreak, several other species (including <i>Culex gelidus</i> and <i>Culex sitiens</i>) were implicated in the north Queensland cases in the 1990s and 2000s.<span><sup>8</sup></span></p><p>Australia is one of the most vulnerable regions to climate change globally,<span><sup>9</sup></span> with a projected increased frequency of hotter days and extreme weather events.<span><sup>10</sup></span> A changing climate might further complicate the interactions between JEV vectors, hosts and the environment. Higher rainfall, temperature and levels of evaporation and humidity are risk factors for JEV transmission<span><sup>11</sup></span> and also affect population dynamics of birds, mosquitoes and feral pigs.<span><sup>12</sup></span> However, there are still many unknowns in the Australian context. The effects of changing climatic and environmental factors on JEV spread and emergence in novel locations, transmission dynamics and spatiotemporal patterns, the origins and subsequent distribution pathways of the recent outbreak, the potential competence and biology of vector species in different regions, and the role of feral pigs all require further investigation.</p><p>In temperate parts of Asia, JEV generally follows an epidemic pattern with outbreaks occurring over the warmer seasons, exacerbated by the wet season and pre-harvest periods when rice cultivation occurs.<span><sup>1</sup></span> In Australia, it is expected that JEV will mirror patterns of other endemic encephalitic flaviviruses, particularly the Murray Valley encephalitis virus (MVEV), which is found in northern parts of Australia and has occasional yet substantial outbreaks in temperate Australia over the wet, summer season, coinciding with flooding events around the Murray–Darling Basin.<span><sup>13</sup></span> Published research on JEV in Australia after the 2021–2023 outbreak primarily focuses on identifying potential transmission dynamics, routes of introduction and risk factors<span><sup>12, 14-16</sup></span> (Supporting Information). However, these research efforts suffer from a significant lack of empirical data. Despite these limitations, studies unanimously call for further research and highlight the urgent need for improved surveillance.</p><p>At the time of the 2021–2023 outbreak, the prevailing, passive surveillance system proved futile in detecting JEV circulation in Australia, resulting in cases being detected in pigs and humans at a similar time. The failure put response efforts at a disadvantage and highlighted limitations of surveillance in Australia, which remains fragmented, with only animal health data publicly available with regards to geographic incidence, and human case distribution only detectable by searching the media.<span><sup>12</sup></span> Surveillance is led by a subcommittee of the Communicable Disease Network Australia: the National Arbovirus and Malaria Advisory Committee.<span><sup>17</sup></span> Surveillance is monitored by state and territory, and federal agency members of this committee, along with the Zoonotic Flavivirus Diagnostics Committee (established by the Public Health Network of Australia). JEV surveillance is managed by the different states and territories, with arbovirus and mosquito monitoring reports typically released weekly. These reports include a range of indicators, such as human cases (notified/confirmed and predicted cases), mosquito trapping, serosurveys and, following the onset of the recent outbreak, from 2022 sentinel chicken surveillance was expanded to include JEV.<span><sup>18-20</sup></span> It is expected that most of these surveillance committees will be integrated into the Australian Centre of Disease Control (Australian CDC).</p><p>There is a global movement towards a One Health approach for preparing and responding to zoonotic diseases such as JEV. The One Health approach recognises the interdependent and closely connected health of humans, animals and the environment and uses links between these fields to develop new disease control strategies — from prevention to detection, preparedness, response and management.<span><sup>21</sup></span> Australia has only recently embraced the One Health concept, largely spurred by the recent JEV outbreak.<span><sup>4</sup></span> JEV and other zoonotic diseases are inherently One Health issues, yet existing surveillance systems do not explicitly account for this. The West Nile virus (Kunjin virus subtype) and Ross River virus outbreaks in 2011<span><sup>18, 19</sup></span> demonstrate the need for improved interdisciplinary collaboration. Encouragingly, there is a growing recognition of a One Health approach in Australia,<span><sup>22</sup></span> with the interim Australian CDC and JEV-focused committees and researchers acknowledging this,<span><sup>23</sup></span> and prioritising the approach in the development of the interim Australian CDC and the Australian response to JEV infection and mpox (caused by the monkeypox virus).<span><sup>23</sup></span></p><p>There is a pressing need to shift from a reactive “surveillance and response” approach to a more proactive, comprehensive “predict and prevent” strategy, particularly in regional areas of Australia where populations are at greater risk. As Japanese encephalitis is a vaccine-preventable disease, enhanced surveillance could have potentially prevented the deaths during recent outbreaks.<span><sup>12, 24</sup></span> Given the extensive geographical spread of the JEV outbreak, the high fatality in the MVEV outbreak in recent years in Australia, and the relatively sparse population in these areas posing challenges to surveillance, developing accurate and robust predictive tools based on real-world data is crucial. These tools can streamline preventive public health efforts, especially in regions with limited resources. For example, an early warning system that predicts high risk areas for JEV transmission, incorporating climate and weather, vector, vertebrate and human density and distribution could help initiate and direct targeted interventions such as vaccination campaigns and enhanced surveillance in vulnerable regions.</p><p>The future direction of JEV in Australia can only be speculated, with current research limited by a fragmented surveillance strategy and significant empirical research gaps with regards to transmission, such as the role of feral pigs, bird ecology and infection, and reservoir immunity. The closely linked nature of JEV, MVEV and West Nile virus (Kunjin virus subtype) in Australia, including shared vectors, avian hosts and suitable transmission conditions, as well as limitations in diagnostic testing (particularly in the context of previous infection by one or more of the viruses)<span><sup>22</sup></span> has hindered our understanding of the epidemiology and ecology of these viruses. For example, in 2023, the largest outbreak of MVEV occurred in the Murray–Darling Basin since 1974 with a fatality rate higher than previous outbreaks, but curiously this occurred in the absence of any sign of JEV.<span><sup>18, 19</sup></span> However, the overlap in ecology and transmission of these viruses might provide an opportunity for a more comprehensive surveillance system targeting multiple diseases.</p><p>A thorough surveillance system built on a One Health, multidisciplinary approach that provides high quality, robust data is vital to the containment of outbreaks and rapid initiation of appropriate responses. The proposal and subsequent development of the interim Australian CDC<span><sup>23</sup></span> with a central focus on One Health is welcomed. This is further supported by experts’ calls for a central repository, unified reporting and data linkage system,<span><sup>2</sup></span> and a national agency for coordinating surveillance efforts across Australia. The Australian CDC could provide a key role in facilitating a multidisciplinary data-based central repository as a governing body, steering coordinated surveillance — potentially with a dedicated department for infectious disease surveillance and response.</p><p>A central data repository could further address challenges of fragmentation in available data (including surveillance data), and issues with its organisation across agencies and disciplines in each state and territory. The recent JEV outbreak highlighted the need for improved data sharing agreements and data governance principles, which will provide a platform for rapid, timely risk assessments to inform national outbreak responses, and for use in translational research activities such as real-time, real-world, big data-driven early warning systems.</p><p>There is an urgent need for research in JEV epidemiology and virus transmission dynamics in temporal climates such as south-eastern Australia, particularly for studies demonstrating mosquito–vertebrate host–mosquito transmission to identify and define vertebrate hosts; and to develop long term projections for decision and policy makers. A recent review on early warning systems<span><sup>25</sup></span> proposed the integration of data from other nations to enhance predictive models, which might simultaneously grow research capacity through collaborations with experts and research groups. The review discussed a network for early warning between Australia and China for influenza;<span><sup>25</sup></span> however, in the context of vector-borne diseases such as Japanese encephalitis, the concept could be extended to neighbouring countries, for example Indonesia and Papua New Guinea where potential routes of introduction exist, to broaden surveillance and complement early warning. Although this is not an easy task, it is possible with fruitful collaborations between human and animal health researchers, entomologists, meteorologists, agricultural departments, and other industry agencies associated with JEV.</p><p>A One Health approach centred around interdisciplinary collaboration, with input from practitioners with different yet complementary roles, diverse skills and expertise could optimise outcomes and outbreak preparedness strategies. Some strategies include potential implementation of new innovations and technology such as the development of an Australian xenomonitoring system,<span><sup>26</sup></span> or introducing <i>Wolbachia</i>-based technology<span><sup>27</sup></span> for mosquito control, or further developing sentinel animal programs to improve early detection.</p><p>A pivotal aspect for effective JEV management in Australia is enhancing research capacity for vector-borne diseases. The capacity must be adaptable to the diverse range of vector-borne diseases present in Australia and in neighbouring regions, particularly as climate change increases the suitability of new areas for disease spread. Building research teams that include early and mid-career researchers is essential for ensuring long term sustainability and skill development for future disease management and control. Despite the current challenge of declining research capacity, collaborative efforts across disciplines, possibly facilitated by the CDC as functions and responsibilities shift, could reduce duplication and streamline outcomes and resources. Additionally, the training of early and mid-career researchers in priority areas might be beneficial through establishing CDC-affiliated academic institutions that can fill research gaps and enhance capacity in these critical fields.</p><p>Further investment and funding are key to undertaking research, developing skilled researchers, and ensuring sustainable, productive research outputs, particularly of translational research efforts that promote preparedness and prevention of outbreaks. The Healthy Environments and Lives (HEAL) Network was launched in 2021 after receiving a $10 million grant over five years from the National Health and Medical Research Council Special Initiative in Human Health and Environmental Change, with a major theme of biosecurity and emerging infections addressing multidimensional determinants of infectious diseases and approaches to managing these into the future.<span><sup>28</sup></span> However, considerable and sustained funding is crucial to long term research in climate and environmental change and human health, particularly in infectious diseases. Hopefully, interdisciplinary collaboration and integrated management of JEV will be more efficient and cost-effective, while providing opportunities for joint funding for JEV control and management going forward.</p><p>A large component of the appropriate management of JEV will rely on growing awareness of the virus and educating stakeholders and the public about its transmission dynamics and risk factors. Clear responsibilities for different government departments need to be outlined for effectual policy arrangement and response coordination. Farmers and livestock producers play a key role in disease surveillance and clinical case detection, particularly in pigs, which might facilitate appropriately targeted public health responses. Additionally, general population awareness of risk factors and developing health literacy will position Australia well in responding positively to outbreaks.</p><p>Improving current approaches to surveillance and disease preparedness should build on the strengths of existing systems and infrastructure rather than discarding progress and achievements. Instead, new systems should aim to enhance current models and address their limitations. Australia is in a fortunate position to have the opportunity to learn from international practice in surveillance and disease preparedness as discussions around CDC development progress and should seize this opportunity given the ongoing threat posed by emerging infectious diseases.</p><p>Despite the shortfalls of Australia's response to the recent JEV outbreak, the future of JEV prevention and control in Australia is hopeful, but there is significant work to be done. The need for improved knowledge of JEV transmission dynamics and quality surveillance data cannot be overlooked in developing current preparedness strategies for JEV. Australia is in a particularly opportune position to rethink and restructure current approaches to current disease preparedness strategies, with the development of the Australian CDC — an opportunity that cannot be missed. The recent outbreak of JEV is a clear demonstration of the need for this, especially given that Japanese encephalitis is vaccine preventable, and with timely intervention, such as vaccination, no deaths need occur.</p><p>No relevant disclosures.</p><p>Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":18214,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Medical Journal of Australia\",\"volume\":\"222 2\",\"pages\":\"58-62\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":6.7000,\"publicationDate\":\"2024-12-09\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.5694/mja2.52550\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Medical Journal of Australia\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"3\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.5694/mja2.52550\",\"RegionNum\":2,\"RegionCategory\":\"医学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Medical Journal of Australia","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.5694/mja2.52550","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

日本脑炎是由日本脑炎病毒引起的。乙脑病毒是亚洲病毒性脑炎的主要病因1,在该大陆和太平洋地区岛屿的许多国家流行。虽然只有一小部分病例有症状,但20-30%是致命的,30-50%会产生严重的神经系统后遗症澳大利亚相对来说没有受到影响,在20世纪90年代末只发现了少数病例,主要来自国际旅行者,当地传播仅限于托雷斯海峡和约克角。在约克角最后一次发现JEV是在2005年从野猪和蚊子中分离出来的。由于成本和劳动密集型的维护,潜在的职业健康和安全问题,以及对使用扩增宿主(猪)的潜在公共卫生风险的担忧,澳大利亚的哨点动物监测已于2011年逐步取消,当它们变成病毒时,这可能有助于传播哨兵动物的使用被一般的基于蚊虫陷阱的监测系统所取代该方框提供了1990年代至2023年澳大利亚乙脑病毒里程碑的时间表,详细说明了动物和人类病例以及监测方面的相应变化。乙脑病毒于2021年再次出现,在提维群岛出现了一例致命病例,不久之后,于2022年以前所未有的规模和地理传播被发现:在澳大利亚东南部的四个州(新南威尔士州、维多利亚州、昆士兰州、南澳大利亚州)发现了人类和猪场病例。2022年3月4日,澳大利亚政府宣布JEV爆发为具有全国意义的传染病事件在随后的几个月中,共发现了46例人间病例(包括7例死亡)(截至2023年2月13日)2023年6月16日宣布结束对日本脑炎病毒的应急响应,但仍对澳大利亚水鸟、猪和蚊子种群中潜在的地方性流行表示关切。乙脑病毒在涉水水鸟和库蚊之间保持地方性动物循环,在某些情况下,在猪之间传播,并蔓延到人类和马鸟类充当维持宿主,可以在没有明显疾病迹象的情况下藏匿病毒。人类和马是最终宿主,可能通过传染性蚊子的叮咬被感染。然而,终端宿主不能产生足够高的病毒水平来感染正在进食的蚊子。在亚洲,猪通常充当扩增宿主,迅速将病毒繁殖到高水平,从而可以传播给易感的蚊子物种,从而导致对人类的溢出。在2021-2023年澳大利亚爆发期间,没有证据表明猪充当了扩增宿主。澳大利亚和西太平洋部分地区(如巴布亚新几内亚)的主要JEV媒介是环纹库蚊。尽管这种蚊子可能是澳大利亚东南部暴发的主要媒介,但在20世纪90年代和21世纪初,昆士兰州北部的病例涉及其他几种蚊子(包括吉力库蚊和锡氏库蚊)。澳大利亚是全球最易受气候变化影响的地区之一,预计炎热天气和极端天气事件的频率将会增加气候变化可能使乙脑病毒媒介、宿主和环境之间的相互作用进一步复杂化。较高的降雨量、温度、蒸发和湿度水平是JEV传播的危险因素,也会影响鸟类、蚊子和野猪的种群动态然而,在澳大利亚的背景下,仍有许多未知因素。气候和环境因素变化对乙脑病毒新地点传播和出现的影响、传播动态和时空格局、最近疫情的起源和随后的分布途径、不同地区媒介物种的潜在能力和生物学以及野猪的作用都需要进一步调查。在亚洲温带地区,乙脑病毒一般呈流行模式,在较温暖的季节暴发,雨季和水稻种植的收获前期加剧了疫情在澳大利亚,预计乙脑病毒将反映其他地方性脑黄病毒的模式,特别是在澳大利亚北部地区发现的墨利谷脑炎病毒(MVEV),该病毒在潮湿的夏季在澳大利亚温带地区偶尔发生大规模暴发。在2021-2023年疫情爆发后,澳大利亚发表的关于乙脑病毒的研究主要集中在确定潜在的传播动力学、传入途径和风险因素[12,14 -16](支持信息)。然而,这些研究工作严重缺乏经验数据。尽管存在这些限制,但研究一致呼吁进一步研究,并强调迫切需要改进监测。 在2021-2023年疫情期间,澳大利亚普遍采用的被动监测系统在发现乙脑病毒传播方面被证明是无效的,导致猪和人同时发现病例。这一失败使应对工作处于不利地位,并突出了澳大利亚监测工作的局限性,澳大利亚的监测工作仍然分散,只有关于地理发病率的公开动物卫生数据,只有通过搜索媒体才能发现人类病例分布监测工作由澳大利亚传染病网络的一个小组委员会:国家虫媒病毒和疟疾咨询委员会领导。17监测工作由州和地区、该委员会的联邦机构成员以及人畜共患黄病毒诊断委员会(由澳大利亚公共卫生网设立)进行监测。乙脑病毒监测由不同的州和地区管理,通常每周发布虫媒病毒和蚊子监测报告。这些报告包括一系列指标,如人间病例(通报/确诊和预测病例)、蚊虫捕获、血清调查,以及在最近的疫情爆发后,从2022年开始将哨点鸡监测扩大到包括JEV.18-20。预计这些监测委员会中的大多数将并入澳大利亚疾病控制中心(澳大利亚CDC)。全球正在采取一种“同一个健康”方针,以防备和应对乙脑病毒等人畜共患疾病。“同一个健康”方针认识到人类、动物和环境的健康相互依存和密切相关,并利用这些领域之间的联系制定新的疾病控制战略——从预防到检测、准备、反应和管理澳大利亚直到最近才接受了“同一个健康”的概念,这主要是受到最近JEV爆发的刺激乙脑病毒和其他人畜共患疾病本质上是同一个健康问题,但现有的监测系统没有明确说明这一点。2011年爆发的西尼罗病毒(昆津病毒亚型)和罗斯河病毒(11,19)表明有必要加强跨学科合作。令人鼓舞的是,澳大利亚越来越多地认识到“同一个健康”方法22,澳大利亚疾病预防控制中心临时委员会和以乙脑病毒为重点的委员会和研究人员也承认这一点23,并在制定澳大利亚疾病预防控制中心临时方法和澳大利亚应对乙脑病毒感染和mpox(由猴痘病毒引起)时优先考虑该方法。23 .迫切需要从被动的“监测和应对”办法转变为更主动、更全面的“预测和预防”战略,特别是在澳大利亚人口面临更大风险的区域。由于日本脑炎是一种疫苗可预防的疾病,加强监测本可以潜在地防止最近疫情期间的死亡。12,24鉴于乙脑病毒疫情在地理上的广泛传播,澳大利亚近年来MVEV疫情的高致死率,以及这些地区人口相对稀少,对监测构成挑战,因此基于真实世界数据开发准确和强大的预测工具至关重要。这些工具可以简化预防性公共卫生工作,特别是在资源有限的地区。例如,一个预测乙脑病毒传播高风险地区的预警系统,结合气候和天气、媒介、脊椎动物和人类的密度和分布,可以帮助发起和指导有针对性的干预措施,例如在脆弱地区开展疫苗接种运动和加强监测。澳大利亚乙脑病毒的未来发展方向只能推测,目前的研究受到分散的监测策略和在传播方面的重大实证研究差距的限制,例如野猪的作用、鸟类生态和感染以及水库免疫。澳大利亚乙脑病毒、MVEV和西尼罗病毒(昆津病毒亚型)密切相关的性质,包括共同的媒介、禽类宿主和适当的传播条件,以及诊断检测的局限性(特别是在以前感染过一种或多种病毒的背景下)22,阻碍了我们对这些病毒的流行病学和生态学的理解。例如,2023年,自1974年以来最大的MVEV疫情发生在默里-达令盆地,致死率高于以前的疫情,但奇怪的是,这次发生在没有任何乙瘟迹象的情况下。18,19然而,这些病毒在生态和传播方面的重叠可能为针对多种疾病的更全面的监测系统提供了机会。建立在“同一个健康”多学科方法基础上的全面监测系统,提供高质量、可靠的数据,对于遏制疫情和迅速采取适当应对措施至关重要。 委员会欢迎提议和随后制定的以“同一个健康”为中心的临时《澳大利亚疾病控制和预防23》。专家们呼吁建立一个中央储存库、统一的报告和数据链接系统2,以及一个协调澳大利亚各地监测工作的国家机构,这进一步支持了这一点。澳大利亚疾病预防控制中心可以发挥关键作用,促进作为一个管理机构建立一个基于数据的多学科中央储存库,指导协调监测工作————可能设有一个专门负责传染病监测和反应的部门。中央数据存储库可以进一步解决可用数据(包括监测数据)碎片化的挑战,以及每个州和地区跨机构和学科的组织问题。最近的乙脑病毒疫情凸显了改进数据共享协议和数据治理原则的必要性,这将为快速、及时的风险评估提供平台,为国家疫情应对提供信息,并用于转化研究活动,如实时、真实、大数据驱动的预警系统。迫切需要在澳大利亚东南部等时间气候条件下开展乙脑流行病学和病毒传播动力学研究,特别是开展蚊子-脊椎动物宿主-蚊子传播的研究,以识别和确定脊椎动物宿主;并为决策者制定长期预测。最近一份关于早期预警系统的审查报告建议整合来自其他国家的数据来加强预测模型,这可能同时通过与专家和研究小组的合作来提高研究能力。该审查讨论了澳大利亚和中国之间的流感早期预警网络;25然而,在日本脑炎等病媒传播疾病的情况下,这一概念可推广到存在潜在传播途径的邻国,例如印度尼西亚和巴布亚新几内亚,以扩大监测并补充早期预警。虽然这不是一项容易的任务,但人类和动物卫生研究人员、昆虫学家、气象学家、农业部门以及与乙脑病毒有关的其他行业机构之间的富有成效的合作是可能的。以跨学科合作为中心的“同一个健康”方针,加上具有不同但互补作用的从业人员、各种技能和专门知识的投入,可以优化成果和疫情防范战略。一些策略包括可能实施新的创新和技术,如开发澳大利亚的异种监测系统,或引入基于沃尔巴克氏体的蚊子控制技术,或进一步发展哨兵动物计划以提高早期发现。澳大利亚有效管理乙脑病毒的一个关键方面是加强对媒介传播疾病的研究能力。这种能力必须适应澳大利亚和邻近地区存在的各种病媒传播疾病,特别是气候变化增加了疾病传播新地区的适宜性。建立包括早期和中期职业研究人员的研究团队对于确保长期可持续性和未来疾病管理和控制的技能发展至关重要。尽管目前面临着研究能力下降的挑战,但随着职能和责任的转变,跨学科的合作努力(可能由疾病预防控制中心促进)可以减少重复并简化结果和资源。此外,通过建立隶属于疾病预防控制中心的学术机构,在优先领域培训职业生涯早期和中期的研究人员可能是有益的,这些学术机构可以填补研究空白,提高这些关键领域的能力。进一步的投资和供资是开展研究、培养熟练的研究人员和确保可持续的、富有成效的研究产出,特别是促进疫情防范和预防的转化研究工作的关键。健康环境和生命网络(HEAL)在获得国家卫生和医学研究委员会人类健康和环境变化特别倡议的5年1 000万美元赠款后,于2021年启动,其主要主题是生物安全和新发感染,解决传染病的多维决定因素和未来管理这些疾病的方法然而,对于气候和环境变化与人类健康,特别是传染病方面的长期研究而言,大量和持续的供资至关重要。希望在乙脑病毒的跨学科合作和综合管理方面能够更加高效和具有成本效益,同时为今后的乙脑病毒控制和管理提供联合资助的机会。 适当管理乙脑病毒的一个重要组成部分将依赖于提高对该病毒的认识,并教育利益攸关方和公众了解其传播动态和风险因素。需要明确政府各部门的职责,以便有效地安排政策和协调应对。农民和牲畜生产者在疾病监测和临床病例发现方面发挥着关键作用,特别是在猪中,这可能促进适当有针对性的公共卫生反应。此外,一般民众对风险因素的认识和发展卫生知识将使澳大利亚在积极应对疫情方面处于有利地位。改进目前的监测和疾病防范方法应利用现有系统和基础设施的优势,而不是放弃进展和成就。相反,新系统应该旨在增强现有模型并解决其局限性。随着围绕疾病控制和预防中心发展的讨论取得进展,澳大利亚有幸有机会学习监测和疾病防范方面的国际做法,鉴于新出现的传染病构成的持续威胁,澳大利亚应抓住这一机会。尽管澳大利亚在应对最近的乙脑病毒疫情方面存在不足,但澳大利亚乙脑病毒预防和控制的未来是有希望的,但仍有大量工作要做。在制定当前的乙脑病毒防范战略时,不能忽视提高乙脑病毒传播动态知识和质量监测数据的必要性。随着澳大利亚疾病预防控制中心的发展,澳大利亚正处于一个特别有利的位置,可以重新考虑和调整目前对当前疾病防范战略的做法,这是一个不容错过的机会。最近爆发的日本脑炎清楚地表明需要这样做,特别是考虑到日本脑炎是可以通过疫苗预防的,通过及时干预,如接种疫苗,不需要发生死亡。无相关披露。不是委托;外部同行评审。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Japanese encephalitis transmission in Australia: challenges and future perspectives

Japanese encephalitis transmission in Australia: challenges and future perspectives

Japanese encephalitis is caused by the Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV). JEV is the main cause of viral encephalitis in Asia,1 and is endemic in many countries on that continent and islands of the Pacific region. Although only a small percentage of cases are symptomatic, 20–30% are fatal and 30–50% develop significant neurological sequelae.2 Australia has escaped relatively unscathed, with only a few cases detected in the late 1990s, mostly from international travellers, with local transmission limited to the Torres Strait and Cape York.2, 3 The last detection of JEV in Cape York was from feral pigs and an isolate of mosquitoes in 2005. Sentinel animal surveillance in Australia was phased out in 2011 due to costs and labour-intensive maintenance, potential occupational health and safety issues, and concerns about the potential public health risk of using amplifying hosts (pigs), which may contribute to transmission when they become viremic.3 Sentinel animal use was replaced by a general mosquito trap-based surveillance system.3 The Box provides a timeline of JEV milestones in Australia from the 1990s to 2023, with details on animal and human cases, and corresponding changes in surveillance.

JEV emerged again in 2021 with a fatal case in the Tiwi Islands, and shortly after was detected on an unprecedented scale and geographical spread in 2022: cases in humans and piggeries were detected across four states in south-eastern Australia (New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia). On 4 March 2022, the Australian Government declared the JEV outbreak a communicable disease incident of national significance.4 Over the following months, a total of 46 cases (including 7 deaths) were identified in humans (as of 13 February 2023).5 The end of the JEV emergency response was announced on 16 June 2023,6 although concern remains regarding potential endemicity in Australian waterbird, pig and mosquito populations.

JEV is maintained in an enzootic cycle between wading waterbirds and Culex spp mosquitoes and, in some cases, pigs, with spillover to humans and horses.7 Birds act as maintenance hosts and can harbour the virus without overt signs of disease. Humans and horses are dead-end hosts and may become infected through the bite of an infectious mosquito. However, dead-end hosts cannot produce virus levels high enough to infect feeding mosquitoes. In Asia, pigs commonly act as amplifying hosts, rapidly multiplying the virus to high levels that can be passed on to susceptible mosquito species, resulting in spillover to humans. There is no evidence of pigs acting as amplifying hosts during the 2021–2023 outbreak in Australia.

The dominant JEV vector in Australia and parts of the Western Pacific (such as Papua New Guinea) is Culex annulirostris. Although this mosquito is likely the primary vector for the south-eastern Australian outbreak, several other species (including Culex gelidus and Culex sitiens) were implicated in the north Queensland cases in the 1990s and 2000s.8

Australia is one of the most vulnerable regions to climate change globally,9 with a projected increased frequency of hotter days and extreme weather events.10 A changing climate might further complicate the interactions between JEV vectors, hosts and the environment. Higher rainfall, temperature and levels of evaporation and humidity are risk factors for JEV transmission11 and also affect population dynamics of birds, mosquitoes and feral pigs.12 However, there are still many unknowns in the Australian context. The effects of changing climatic and environmental factors on JEV spread and emergence in novel locations, transmission dynamics and spatiotemporal patterns, the origins and subsequent distribution pathways of the recent outbreak, the potential competence and biology of vector species in different regions, and the role of feral pigs all require further investigation.

In temperate parts of Asia, JEV generally follows an epidemic pattern with outbreaks occurring over the warmer seasons, exacerbated by the wet season and pre-harvest periods when rice cultivation occurs.1 In Australia, it is expected that JEV will mirror patterns of other endemic encephalitic flaviviruses, particularly the Murray Valley encephalitis virus (MVEV), which is found in northern parts of Australia and has occasional yet substantial outbreaks in temperate Australia over the wet, summer season, coinciding with flooding events around the Murray–Darling Basin.13 Published research on JEV in Australia after the 2021–2023 outbreak primarily focuses on identifying potential transmission dynamics, routes of introduction and risk factors12, 14-16 (Supporting Information). However, these research efforts suffer from a significant lack of empirical data. Despite these limitations, studies unanimously call for further research and highlight the urgent need for improved surveillance.

At the time of the 2021–2023 outbreak, the prevailing, passive surveillance system proved futile in detecting JEV circulation in Australia, resulting in cases being detected in pigs and humans at a similar time. The failure put response efforts at a disadvantage and highlighted limitations of surveillance in Australia, which remains fragmented, with only animal health data publicly available with regards to geographic incidence, and human case distribution only detectable by searching the media.12 Surveillance is led by a subcommittee of the Communicable Disease Network Australia: the National Arbovirus and Malaria Advisory Committee.17 Surveillance is monitored by state and territory, and federal agency members of this committee, along with the Zoonotic Flavivirus Diagnostics Committee (established by the Public Health Network of Australia). JEV surveillance is managed by the different states and territories, with arbovirus and mosquito monitoring reports typically released weekly. These reports include a range of indicators, such as human cases (notified/confirmed and predicted cases), mosquito trapping, serosurveys and, following the onset of the recent outbreak, from 2022 sentinel chicken surveillance was expanded to include JEV.18-20 It is expected that most of these surveillance committees will be integrated into the Australian Centre of Disease Control (Australian CDC).

There is a global movement towards a One Health approach for preparing and responding to zoonotic diseases such as JEV. The One Health approach recognises the interdependent and closely connected health of humans, animals and the environment and uses links between these fields to develop new disease control strategies — from prevention to detection, preparedness, response and management.21 Australia has only recently embraced the One Health concept, largely spurred by the recent JEV outbreak.4 JEV and other zoonotic diseases are inherently One Health issues, yet existing surveillance systems do not explicitly account for this. The West Nile virus (Kunjin virus subtype) and Ross River virus outbreaks in 201118, 19 demonstrate the need for improved interdisciplinary collaboration. Encouragingly, there is a growing recognition of a One Health approach in Australia,22 with the interim Australian CDC and JEV-focused committees and researchers acknowledging this,23 and prioritising the approach in the development of the interim Australian CDC and the Australian response to JEV infection and mpox (caused by the monkeypox virus).23

There is a pressing need to shift from a reactive “surveillance and response” approach to a more proactive, comprehensive “predict and prevent” strategy, particularly in regional areas of Australia where populations are at greater risk. As Japanese encephalitis is a vaccine-preventable disease, enhanced surveillance could have potentially prevented the deaths during recent outbreaks.12, 24 Given the extensive geographical spread of the JEV outbreak, the high fatality in the MVEV outbreak in recent years in Australia, and the relatively sparse population in these areas posing challenges to surveillance, developing accurate and robust predictive tools based on real-world data is crucial. These tools can streamline preventive public health efforts, especially in regions with limited resources. For example, an early warning system that predicts high risk areas for JEV transmission, incorporating climate and weather, vector, vertebrate and human density and distribution could help initiate and direct targeted interventions such as vaccination campaigns and enhanced surveillance in vulnerable regions.

The future direction of JEV in Australia can only be speculated, with current research limited by a fragmented surveillance strategy and significant empirical research gaps with regards to transmission, such as the role of feral pigs, bird ecology and infection, and reservoir immunity. The closely linked nature of JEV, MVEV and West Nile virus (Kunjin virus subtype) in Australia, including shared vectors, avian hosts and suitable transmission conditions, as well as limitations in diagnostic testing (particularly in the context of previous infection by one or more of the viruses)22 has hindered our understanding of the epidemiology and ecology of these viruses. For example, in 2023, the largest outbreak of MVEV occurred in the Murray–Darling Basin since 1974 with a fatality rate higher than previous outbreaks, but curiously this occurred in the absence of any sign of JEV.18, 19 However, the overlap in ecology and transmission of these viruses might provide an opportunity for a more comprehensive surveillance system targeting multiple diseases.

A thorough surveillance system built on a One Health, multidisciplinary approach that provides high quality, robust data is vital to the containment of outbreaks and rapid initiation of appropriate responses. The proposal and subsequent development of the interim Australian CDC23 with a central focus on One Health is welcomed. This is further supported by experts’ calls for a central repository, unified reporting and data linkage system,2 and a national agency for coordinating surveillance efforts across Australia. The Australian CDC could provide a key role in facilitating a multidisciplinary data-based central repository as a governing body, steering coordinated surveillance — potentially with a dedicated department for infectious disease surveillance and response.

A central data repository could further address challenges of fragmentation in available data (including surveillance data), and issues with its organisation across agencies and disciplines in each state and territory. The recent JEV outbreak highlighted the need for improved data sharing agreements and data governance principles, which will provide a platform for rapid, timely risk assessments to inform national outbreak responses, and for use in translational research activities such as real-time, real-world, big data-driven early warning systems.

There is an urgent need for research in JEV epidemiology and virus transmission dynamics in temporal climates such as south-eastern Australia, particularly for studies demonstrating mosquito–vertebrate host–mosquito transmission to identify and define vertebrate hosts; and to develop long term projections for decision and policy makers. A recent review on early warning systems25 proposed the integration of data from other nations to enhance predictive models, which might simultaneously grow research capacity through collaborations with experts and research groups. The review discussed a network for early warning between Australia and China for influenza;25 however, in the context of vector-borne diseases such as Japanese encephalitis, the concept could be extended to neighbouring countries, for example Indonesia and Papua New Guinea where potential routes of introduction exist, to broaden surveillance and complement early warning. Although this is not an easy task, it is possible with fruitful collaborations between human and animal health researchers, entomologists, meteorologists, agricultural departments, and other industry agencies associated with JEV.

A One Health approach centred around interdisciplinary collaboration, with input from practitioners with different yet complementary roles, diverse skills and expertise could optimise outcomes and outbreak preparedness strategies. Some strategies include potential implementation of new innovations and technology such as the development of an Australian xenomonitoring system,26 or introducing Wolbachia-based technology27 for mosquito control, or further developing sentinel animal programs to improve early detection.

A pivotal aspect for effective JEV management in Australia is enhancing research capacity for vector-borne diseases. The capacity must be adaptable to the diverse range of vector-borne diseases present in Australia and in neighbouring regions, particularly as climate change increases the suitability of new areas for disease spread. Building research teams that include early and mid-career researchers is essential for ensuring long term sustainability and skill development for future disease management and control. Despite the current challenge of declining research capacity, collaborative efforts across disciplines, possibly facilitated by the CDC as functions and responsibilities shift, could reduce duplication and streamline outcomes and resources. Additionally, the training of early and mid-career researchers in priority areas might be beneficial through establishing CDC-affiliated academic institutions that can fill research gaps and enhance capacity in these critical fields.

Further investment and funding are key to undertaking research, developing skilled researchers, and ensuring sustainable, productive research outputs, particularly of translational research efforts that promote preparedness and prevention of outbreaks. The Healthy Environments and Lives (HEAL) Network was launched in 2021 after receiving a $10 million grant over five years from the National Health and Medical Research Council Special Initiative in Human Health and Environmental Change, with a major theme of biosecurity and emerging infections addressing multidimensional determinants of infectious diseases and approaches to managing these into the future.28 However, considerable and sustained funding is crucial to long term research in climate and environmental change and human health, particularly in infectious diseases. Hopefully, interdisciplinary collaboration and integrated management of JEV will be more efficient and cost-effective, while providing opportunities for joint funding for JEV control and management going forward.

A large component of the appropriate management of JEV will rely on growing awareness of the virus and educating stakeholders and the public about its transmission dynamics and risk factors. Clear responsibilities for different government departments need to be outlined for effectual policy arrangement and response coordination. Farmers and livestock producers play a key role in disease surveillance and clinical case detection, particularly in pigs, which might facilitate appropriately targeted public health responses. Additionally, general population awareness of risk factors and developing health literacy will position Australia well in responding positively to outbreaks.

Improving current approaches to surveillance and disease preparedness should build on the strengths of existing systems and infrastructure rather than discarding progress and achievements. Instead, new systems should aim to enhance current models and address their limitations. Australia is in a fortunate position to have the opportunity to learn from international practice in surveillance and disease preparedness as discussions around CDC development progress and should seize this opportunity given the ongoing threat posed by emerging infectious diseases.

Despite the shortfalls of Australia's response to the recent JEV outbreak, the future of JEV prevention and control in Australia is hopeful, but there is significant work to be done. The need for improved knowledge of JEV transmission dynamics and quality surveillance data cannot be overlooked in developing current preparedness strategies for JEV. Australia is in a particularly opportune position to rethink and restructure current approaches to current disease preparedness strategies, with the development of the Australian CDC — an opportunity that cannot be missed. The recent outbreak of JEV is a clear demonstration of the need for this, especially given that Japanese encephalitis is vaccine preventable, and with timely intervention, such as vaccination, no deaths need occur.

No relevant disclosures.

Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

求助全文
通过发布文献求助,成功后即可免费获取论文全文。 去求助
来源期刊
Medical Journal of Australia
Medical Journal of Australia 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
5.30%
发文量
410
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Medical Journal of Australia (MJA) stands as Australia's foremost general medical journal, leading the dissemination of high-quality research and commentary to shape health policy and influence medical practices within the country. Under the leadership of Professor Virginia Barbour, the expert editorial team at MJA is dedicated to providing authors with a constructive and collaborative peer-review and publication process. Established in 1914, the MJA has evolved into a modern journal that upholds its founding values, maintaining a commitment to supporting the medical profession by delivering high-quality and pertinent information essential to medical practice.
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术官方微信