logo

VetSRev

Rodent-related zoonotic pathogens at the human-animal-environment interface in Qatar: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Islam, M. M. and Farag, E. and Mahmoudi, A. and Hassan, M. M. and Mostafavi, E. and Enan, K. A. and Al-Romaihi, H. and Atta, M. and El-Hussein, A. R. M. and Mkhize-Kwitshana, Z.

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (2021) 18:

DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18115928

Abstract

Rodents are one of the most diversified terrestrial mammals, and they perform several beneficial activities in nature. These animals are also important as carriers of many pathogens with public health importance. The current systematic review was conducted to formulate a true depiction of rodent-related zoonoses in Qatar. Following systematic searches on PubMed, Scopus, Science Direct, and Web of Science and a screening process, a total of 94 published articles were selected and studied. The studied articles reported 23 rodent-related zoonotic pathogens that include nine bacterial, eleven parasitic, and three viral pathogens, from which the frequently reported pathogens were Mycobacterium tuberculosis (32 reports), Escherichia coli (23), and Salmonella spp. (16). The possible pathway of entry of the rodent-borne pathogens can be the land port, seaports, and airport of Qatar through carrier humans and animals, contaminated food, and agricultural products. The pathogens can be conserved internally by rodents, pets, and livestock; by agricultural production systems; and by food marketing chains. The overall estimated pooled prevalence of the pathogens among the human population was 4.27% (95%CI: 4.03-4.51%; p \textless 0.001) with significant heterogeneity (I^\textrm2= 99.50%). The top three highest prevalent pathogens were M.tuberculosis (30.90%; 22.75-39.04%; p \textless 0.001; I^\textrm2= 99.70%) followed by Toxoplasma gondii (21.93%; 6.23-37.61%; p \textless 0.001; I^\textrm2= 99.30%) and hepatitis E virus (18.29%; 11.72-24.86%; p \textless 0.001; I^\textrm2= 96.70%). However, there is a knowledge gap about the listed pathogens regarding the occurrence, transmission pathways, and rodent role in transmission dynamics at the human-animal-environment interface in Qatar. Further studies are required to explore the role of rodents in spreading zoonotic pathogens through the One Health framework, consisting of zoologists, ecologists, microbiologists, entomologists, veterinarians, and public health experts in this country.

Citation

Islam, M. M., Farag, E., Mahmoudi, A., Hassan, M. M., Mostafavi, E., Enan, K. A., Al-Romaihi, H., Atta, M., El-Hussein, A. R. M., & Mkhize-Kwitshana, Z. (2021). Rodent-related zoonotic pathogens at the human-animal-environment interface in Qatar: a systematic review and meta-analysis. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(11). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18115928 meta-analysis, man, systematic reviews, pet animals, pets, human diseases, public health, zoonoses, zoonotic infections, disease transmission, domestic animals, livestock, viral diseases, veterinarians, tuberculosis, pathogens, liver diseases, Salmonella, Toxoplasma gondii, Escherichia coli, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, veterinary surgeons, Protozoan, Helminth and Arthropod Parasites of Humans [VV220], Protozoan, Helminth, Mollusc and Arthropod Parasites of Animals [LL822], Prion, Viral, Bacterial and Fungal Pathogens of Animals [LL821], Prion, Viral, Bacterial and Fungal Pathogens of Humans [VV210], viral infections, E coli, rodents, Qatar, Hepatitis E virus, vets, hepatitis E, carrier state

Keywords