Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee...

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Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Transcript of Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee...

Page 1: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Epidemiology of Rabies

John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD

Communicable and Environmental Diseases

Tennessee Department of Health

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Page 2: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Overview

• Rabies virus

• Rabies epidemiology in the US and Tennessee– Skunk rabies– Raccoon rabies and ORV

• Guidance documents– ACIP: Pre-exposure vaccination– Compendium

Page 3: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Rabies virus- Lyssavirus

• Rhabdoviridae- “bullet” shaped RNA virus

• Neurotropic, fatal encephalitis

• Variants- host adapted

Page 4: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Transmission

• Transmission: BITE of a RABID animal

– Virus-laden saliva contacts nerves

• Saliva in fresh cut or abrasion, mucous membranes (scratch?-- no)

• Person to person: theoretical risk, never documented in health care worker

Page 5: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Rabies Epidemiology in the United States

Page 6: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

• Human rabies in US: 2 – 5 cases / year– Tennessee case 2002

• PEP: 100% effective– ~ 40,000 treatments/ year

• $2000 – 6,000 / treatment

– ~ 75% unnecessary based on rabies risk

• Animal rabies: 7,000 – 8,000 cases / year (wildlife)– 4 variants: raccoon, skunk, bat, fox– Canine variant no longer enzootic in US

Page 7: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Page 8: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Page 9: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Page 10: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Page 11: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Terrestrial

Wildlife

Rabies

Page 12: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Page 13: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Page 14: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Page 15: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Bat Rabies

Page 16: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Page 17: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Bat-associated Rabies

U.S.- majority of human rabies caused by bats• From 1980-2000, 26/35 (74%) cases • Silver-haired/Eastern pipistrelle bat

Minor wound from bat bite • Difficult to detect • Persons may not recognize exposure

Most human rabies diagnosed post-mortem• Not on differential• Healthcare workers exposed

Page 18: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Rabies Epidemiology in Tennessee

Page 19: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Rabies Testing by the Tennessee Department of Health (TDH)

• Three testing centers– Nashville– Knoxville– Jackson

• Rabies Diagnosis: Direct Fluorescent Antibody testing (DFA) of brain tissue

• Testing performed free of charge

• Not much attention paid to number and characteristics of negative results

Page 20: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Results from 2005

• Review of laboratory slips from 3 testing centers in 2005

• 2017 animal submissions – 2010 submitted to testing centers in TN

• 92 (96%) of 95 counties• 362 different localities• 18 out-of-state

– 7 additional specimens from USDA-WS surveillance program (submitted to CDC)

Page 21: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Most Common Animals Submitted for Rabies Testing to the TDH in 2005

1 0 0

576

695

182023242833

109

184

254

4 0003123160

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

Animal Species

Nu

mb

er

of

Su

bm

issio

ns

TOTAL

POSITIVE

Page 22: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Positive and Negative Submissions for Rabies Testing, TDH, 2005

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

Dog Cat Raccoon Bat Skunk

Species

Num

ber

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

20Negative

Positive

Page 23: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Rabies positive animals in Tennessee by year, 1999-2005

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005

Year

Nu

mb

er

Skunk

Bat

Raccoon

Dog

Fox

Horse

Other *

*N=4: Cat 2001 (1), 2003 (1); Cow 2002 (1); Opossum 2004 (1)

Page 24: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Unico

i F

– 1

R-1

LakeObion

Dyer

Lauderdale

Tipton

Shelby B - 2 Fayette

Haywood

Crockett

Gibson

Weakley

Carroll

Henry

Madison

Hardeman McNairy

Chester

Henderson

HardinWayne Lawrence

GilesS - 1

Lincoln S - 2

Franklin Marion B - 1

HamiltonB– 2S - 1

Bradley Polk

Perry

LewisF - 1

Dec

atu

r

Hickman

MauryB - 1

Marshall

Bedford S - 2

Moore

CoffeeS-1

Grundy

Seq

uatch

ie

BledsoeRhea

Mei

gs

McMinnMonroe B - 1

Loudon Blount

RoaneSevier

KnoxB – 4F-1

Morgan

ScottCampbell B - 1

Claiborne

Grainger

Union

Hamblen

Jefferson

Cocke S - 2

Stewart

Houston

Humphreys

Montgomery

Dickson

Williamson S - 4

Davidson B - 2

Che

atha

m

Robertson Sumner S - 1

Macon

Trousdale

Wilson S - 1

Rutherford S – 5 H - 1

ClayPickett

JacksonOverton

Fentress

Smith

Dekalb

Canno

n

Warren B -

1V

an

Bur

en

White

Putnam B - 1

Cumberland

Hancock

Hawkins

GreeneS – 1 D - 1

Was

hing

ton

R-1

, S-1

Sullivan

Carter R - 2

Joh

nso

n S

- 1

Benton

TN Rabies Positives (n=48) by County, 2005

Bat - - - - - - - 16 Horse---- 1

Skunk - - - - - 23 Fox - - - - 3

Raccoon - - - -4 Dog - - - - 1

Page 25: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Unico

i C

– 1

LakeObion

Dyer

Lauderdale

Tipton

ShelbyFayette

Haywood

Crockett

Gibson

Weakley

Carroll

Henry

Madison

Hardeman McNairy

Chester

Henderson

HardinWayne Lawrence

Giles

Lincoln S - 1

Franklin Marion

Hamilton

BradleyF-1

Polk

Perry

Lewis

Dec

atu

r

Hickman

Maury

Marshall

Bedford D - 1

MooreS-3

Coffee

Grundy

Seq

uatch

ie

BledsoeRhea

Mei

gs

McMinnMonroe

Loudon Blount

RoaneSevier

Knox

Morgan

ScottCampbell

Claiborne

Grainger

Union

Hamblen

JeffersonS-1

Cocke

Stewart

Houston

Humphreys

Montgomery

Dickson

Williamson S - 4

Davidson S - 2

Che

atha

m

Robertson Sumner Macon

Trousdale

Wilson

Rutherford S – 10

ClayPickett

JacksonOverton

Fentress

Smith

Dekalb

Canno

n

WarrenS-1

Van

B

uren

White

Putnam

Cumberland

Hancock

Hawkins

Greene

Was

hing

ton

Sullivan

Carter

Joh

nso

n

Benton

TN Rabies Positives (n=26) by County, 15 April 2006

Skunk - - 23 Fox - - 1 (Racc Var)

Cat ------- 1 (Racc Var) Dog - 1 (Sk Var)

Page 26: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Page 27: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Skunk, Bat, and Raccoon Rabies in TN, 1999-2005

1 48

4

0102030405060708090

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005

Year

Num

ber

Skunk

Bat

Raccoon

Raccoon variant

Page 28: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Unic

oi

Marion

Hamilton Bradley Polk

Grundy

Sequatchie

Bledsoe

Rhea

Mei

gs

McMinnMonroe

Loudon Blount

RoaneSevier

Knox

Morgan Anderson

Scott

Campbell

Claiborne

GraingerUnion

Hamblen

Jefferson

Cocke

Pickett

Overton

Fentress

Dekalb

Warren

Van

Bure

n

White

Putnam

Cumberland

Hancock

Hawkins

Greene

Was

hing

ton

Sullivan

Carter

John

son

East TN counties with raccoon variant rabies, 2002-Apr 15, 2006

Page 29: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Why is raccoon rabies problematic?

• Raccoons thrive in suburban settings• Aggressive and swift

– Increase in dog and cat (2X) rabies– Increase in other rabid species (foxes,

groundhogs, livestock, etc.)

• Increase in human exposures and need for PEP risk assessment

• Increased animal control calls & anxiety

Page 30: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Tennessee response to raccoon rabies

• Education– Reducing risk– Protecting pets through vaccination

• Increase surveillance– USDA-Wildlife Services (> 20 East TN counties)

• Oral rabies vaccination (ORV) campaign– Appalachian Ridge baiting– GAT baiting

Page 31: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Anticipated ORV Barrier Zone for Raccoon Rabies in the United States

ORV barrier zones forraccoon rabies

2004 cases Proposed ORV

Page 32: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

ORV in Tennessee, 2005

GAT

Appalachain Ridge

Page 33: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Page 34: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Guidance documents

Page 35: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/PDF/rr/rr4801.pdf

Page 36: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Imovax® (Sanofi Pasteur)

• Previously used off-label, 0.1ml intradermal for pre-exposure vaccination

• TDH no longer advocating use of Imovax off-label consistent with new ACIP recommendations

• Important for state, regional and local HD to promote rabies vaccination for at-risk persons

Page 37: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

http://s94745432.onlinehome.us/RabiesCompendium.pdf

Page 38: Epidemiology of Rabies John R. Dunn, DVM, PhD Communicable and Environmental Diseases Tennessee Department of Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Questions?

John DunnTennessee Department of HealthCommunicable and Environmental Diseases4th Floor, Cordell Hull Building425 5th Avenue NorthNashville, TN 3724615.741.7247