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What have we achieved since Kiev?: Looking forward

What have we achieved since Kiev?: Looking forward. Deborah J Briggs, PhD College of Veterinary Medicine Kansas State University. Epidemiology Rabies diagnosis Animal rabies control Human rabies prevention Vaccinology and immunology Bat rabies. Epidemiology.

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What have we achieved since Kiev?: Looking forward

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  1. What have we achieved since Kiev?: Looking forward Deborah J Briggs, PhD College of Veterinary Medicine Kansas State University

  2. Epidemiology • Rabies diagnosis • Animal rabies control • Human rabies prevention • Vaccinology and immunology • Bat rabies

  3. Epidemiology • Surveillance – increased sample submission, variant identification in Europe; becomes sporadic or non-existent further East • Increasing data on submissions, negative and positive • Rabies in Europe Bulletin – increased reporting and support by most European countries • Fox rabies disappeared in W Europe • Epidemiological data becomes sporadic or non-existent farther east • Threat of re-emergence of rabies by raccoon dog

  4. Rabies Diagnosis • Increasing number of Rabies Reference Laboratories • Collaboration and cooperation in EU rabies laboratories – EU very active in support of rabies diagnoses • Exchange of samples – WHO/OIE CCs • Research begun into geographical host species and chronology in Europe • Need to expand diagnostic capabilities into rabies endemic zones farther east

  5. Animal Rabies Control • Eastern Europe – dramatic decrease in rabies • ORV – Eastern Europe and sporadically in Asia • EU funding opportunities for control programs • Minimum financial cost for Rabies control in Europe: 10.04 – 16.84 mio Euros annually – Reduce? Stop? • Strategy for vaccinating raccoon dogs • New models – 60% herd immunity could be a useful target in rabies control and save 1/3 of applied resources – opportunities to design a new strategy

  6. Human rabies and prevention • Recent human rabies survival in the US – Why? • NTV replaced in India • Long lasting memory cells after CCV • Increase usage of low dose intradermal regimens where cost of PEP is prohibitive • Can PreP regimen be reduced?

  7. Vaccinology and Immunology • Transfer of vaccine production technology • ELISA for serological testing for animal export • New ORVs under development • Less expensive ORV

  8. Bat Rabies • Widespread surveillance through Europe – increasing attention to bats across Eurasia, Africa • Establishment of data base for bat viruses – ability to determine bat species through DNA analyses • Need protocol standards to compare results • Spillover into other wildlife species • Need to know species of both positive and negative submitted samples – habitat range • Need for increased surveillance, analyses of genetic diversity & data documentation, pathogenesis, sharing samples

  9. MED VET NET WP05 EBLV Database

  10. Changing focus – • ‘elimination’ of rabies • Broader vision • Cooperation and collaboration • Development of new strategy – bigger picture • Expanding region – Asia, Africa • Rabies is higher on the list of important diseases across the world – more press coverage Responsibility

  11. Looking toward our future:Problems or Opportunities? • Low priority • No major funding • Lack of education awareness on all levels • Passive immune products – limited availability • Treatment in human cases – is it possible?

  12. Opportunities Are we willing to take them?

  13. Working together for success • “A house divided cannot stand” Photo: S Scholand Photo: BJ Mahendra

  14. Working together for success • Agriculture and Health Ministries must work together • International, Regional, National, Local levels “One medicine approach”

  15. Vaccinating dogs in Mexico

  16. RIG Thailand, years 1995-2004 PEP RIG 6 to 11 % of PEP Source : Bureau of General Communicable Diseases, Department of Disease Control, Ministry of Public Health.

  17. Opportunities Can we find money to fund projects?

  18. Funding strategies • What do we want to fund? • Who has that much money that might be willing? • How can we achieve funding? Pilot project to eliminate canine rabies from a specific region GATES Organized commitment – together

  19. Opportunities Can we find a treatment for human rabies?

  20. Human rabies treatment Survival of Wisconsin case – raised many questions: Can human rabies be treated? • Need for animal models to validate/extend current observations on fundamental pathogenesis: • 1. BH4 deficiencies with associated neurotransmitter deficiencies: now in 3/3 patients - confirm, timing/importance (whether early/primary/ causal of disease or late/secondary), fixed vs wildtype?2. Vasospasm: confirm, stick in a flow probe, fixed vs wildtype?

  21. Human rabies treatment • Need anti-virals that work: no effect of ketamine/amantadine/ribavirin on salivary viral load until serum neutralizing antibodies are present • Given absence of antivirals, how can we accelerate immunity, safely?     Are vaccines safe or not in active disease?     Are newer attenuated (double G) constructs different or safer (fixed vs new wildtype/attenuated)?

  22. Opportunities Can we find a solution for limited availability of passive immune products?

  23. PEP often delayed; medical education poor in many regions • Rabies immunoglobulin is given to less than 3% of patients with severe bites in Asia and Africa

  24. Passive immunity – product replacement • Availability extremely limited • Quality and effectiveness • Pepsin digested heat treated products have lower half life • Testing in vivo not always conducted • Mabs for passive immunity in PEP currently undergoing clinical trials

  25. Passive immunity – product replacement de Kruif et al. Annu. Rev. Med. 2007, 58:359-68

  26. Opportunities How can we put rabies on the ‘radar screen’ of the world?

  27. WORLD RABIES DAYSeptember 8, 2007 Together we can make rabies history

  28. World Rabies Day Facts • WHAT: A day of recognition for the ongoing tragedy of rabies • WHO: OIE (World Animal Health Association), ARC (Alliance for Rabies Control) • WHERE: Numerous places throughout the world • WHY: To increase global awareness of rabies • WHEN: September 8, 2007 and annually thereafter

  29. Partners • Support from OIE • Pasteur Institute • Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) • American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) • American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA) • World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA) • Commonwealth Veterinary Association • Association for the Control of Rabies in India (APCRI) • Rabies in Asia Conference Foundation (RIACON) in India

  30. Sponsors/Partners • Merial • Intervet • Sanofi • Novartis • Berna Biotech/Crucell • Pfizer • Virbac

  31. WRD - Objectives • To improve global awareness of rabies and promote prevention at the local and community level • To mobilize resources for local projects - coordinate global veterinary and medical resources to work together to use one medicine approach to fight rabies • To produce and support education initiatives concerning rabies prevention including responsible pet ownership

  32. World Rabies Day Involve 55,000 participants around the world - One for every death that need not have occurred

  33. World Rabies Day - Opportunities • To increase educational awareness and save human lives • To work together toward elimination of canine rabies – press, veterinarians, medical professionals, governments, international organizations • To develop and implement national and regional rabies prevention strategies

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