Published March 1, 2024 | Version v2
Dataset Open

Literature review on the role of mammals in Avian Influenza: data extraction

Description

Avian influenza (AI) is an infectious viral disease of birds, including domestic poultry, which has been causing outbreaks worldwide, leading to several millions of dead wild birds and culled poultry. AI is mainly found in birds, but recently, there was an increase in reported infections in mammals, ranging from no symptoms to mass mortality events and some human cases. Epidemiologically of great concern, evidence of mammalian adaptations have been found, but the transmission routes and pathogenesis in mammals are still to be defined. Hence, it is paramount to address all facets of AI viruses epidemiology, including investigating taxa not customarily thought to be involved in the transmission and trafficking of AI, such as wild mammals. The scope of this work was to assess the role of mammals in AI epidemiology, virology and pathology, i.e. AI maintenance, reservoir role, immunity, role of mammals in a potential pandemic. To do so, we performed an all-encompassing review of the literature on the topic with a two-fold approach: a systematic review of the published AI cases in wild mammals and a narrative approach to provide an expert opinion on the role of mammals in AI spread. The final number of peer-reviewed papers included in the systematic literature review was 76, resulting in 120 unique infection records with AI in wild mammal species. Here the data extraction sheet is available.

 

Notes (English)

EU; xlsx; biohaw@efsa.europa.eu

Files

annex A2.csv

Files (431.8 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:526a7fdae66a5b4e7623bc98f77f18c7
233.8 kB Download
md5:d547c01b1b5c6218e8897c934dd180bd
41.7 kB Preview Download
md5:4fbe5afe9ce20b769868723ebfbcbd0f
156.3 kB Download