February 14, 2017
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Study explores cost, effectiveness of M. bovis interventions in Morocco

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Researchers used mathematical modeling to explore the cost and effectiveness of interventions against bovine tuberculosis in Morocco, where Mycobacterium bovis accounts for close to 18% of drug-resistant TB in humans.

Perspective from

People usually contract M. bovis through contaminated milk or close contact with infected cattle, but airborne person-to-person transmission also has been reported. WHO includes bovine TB (BTB) among the seven neglected zoonoses perceived to be severe threats to public health, according to Jakob Zinsstag, DVM, PhD, of the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, and colleagues.

Zinsstag and colleagues’ model demonstrated that BTB could be eliminated in Morocco within 32 years if 40% of cattle were tested annually and infected cows are slaughtered.

Cattle
M. bovis is usually contracted through contaminated milk or close contact with infected cattle, according to researchers.
Source: Shutterstock.com

“While BTB has been eliminated in cattle and human populations of most high-income countries, it is still a major health threat in low- and middle-income countries,” Zinsstag and colleagues wrote in PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases.

These countries include Morocco, where a non-mandatory test and slaughter method is currently used to control M. bovis in cattle. According to Zinsstag and colleagues, slaughtering cattle that test positive for the disease is an effective intervention to reduce BTB among domestic cattle, but the method is not used effectively in Morocco.

To address this, they developed a mathematical model of BTB transmission in cattle and humans to assess the disease cost and simulate interventions in Morocco, where around 18% of cows have the disease.

Assuming a BTB prevalence of 18% and using annual data on cattle collected by the Moroccan Ministry of Agriculture, Zinsstag and colleagues showed the time until less than 1 in 1,000 cattle had BTB — the WHO standard to show elimination of the disease.

When 100% of cattle are tested annually, Zinsstag and colleagues calculated the time to BTB elimination as 12 years. It was under 20 years when more than 60% of cattle are tested, and 75 years when only 20% are tested.

In simulations in which more than 40% of cattle are tested, the cost of the intervention was between 1.47 billion to 1.60 billion euros — or around $1.56 billion to $1.7 billion — with a time frame of 12 to 32 years until elimination, Zinsstag and colleagues wrote.

“The economic assessment presented here is preliminary, and a detailed cost and cost-effectiveness analysis will be published separately,” they wrote. “However, our analysis informs Moroccan bovine tuberculosis control policy on the time horizon, range of cost and optimal levels of intervention. An effective control program will depend on the human resources and technical and logistical capacity of the veterinary services to implement testing and slaughtering of animals.” – by Gerard Gallagher

Disclosure: The researchers report no relevant financial disclosures.