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. 2022 Feb 28;32(4):775-782.e4.
doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.11.050. Epub 2021 Dec 14.

Seasonal fishery facilitates a novel transmission pathway in an emerging animal reservoir of Guinea worm

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Free article

Seasonal fishery facilitates a novel transmission pathway in an emerging animal reservoir of Guinea worm

Cecily E D Goodwin et al. Curr Biol. .
Free article

Abstract

Exploitation of natural resources is a driver of human infectious disease emergence. The emergence of animal reservoirs of Guinea worm Dracunculus medinensis, particularly in domestic dogs Canis familiaris, has become the major impediment to global eradication of this human disease. 93% of all Guinea worms detected worldwide in 2020 were in dogs in Chad. Novel, non-classical pathways for transmission of Guinea worm in dogs, involving consumption of fish, have been hypothesized to support the maintenance of this animal reservoir. We quantified and analyzed variation in Guinea worm emergence in dogs in Chad, across three climatic seasons, in multiple villages and districts. We applied forensic stable isotope analyses to quantify dietary variation within and among dogs and GPS tracking to characterize their spatial ecology. At the end of the hot-dry season and beginning of the wet season, when fishing by people is most intensive, Guinea worm emergence rates in dogs were highest, dogs ate most fish, and fish consumption was most closely associated with disease. Consumption of fish by dogs enables a non-classical transmission pathway for Guinea worm in Chad. Seasonal fisheries and the facilitation of dogs eating fish are likely contributing to disease persistence and to this key impediment to human disease eradication. Interrelated natural resource use, climatic variation, companion animal ecology, and human health highlight the indispensability of One Health approaches to the challenges of eradicating Guinea worm and other zoonotic diseases.

Keywords: Canis familiaris; Dracunculus medinensis; Neglected Tropical Diseases; One Health; dogs; dracunculiasis; fisheries; parasite; stable isotope; zoonoses.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests. The Carter Center, Chad Ministry of Public Health, and World Health Organization supported data collection. Staff of these organizations who wrote this manuscript are included as authors and were involved in the decision to submit for publication. With the exception of the named authors affiliated with the funding organizations, the funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

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