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Monitoring emerging pathogens using negative nucleic acid test results from endemic pathogens in pig populations: Application to porcine enteric coronaviruses
Authors
Marcelo Almeida
Eric Burrough
+23 more
Guilherme Arruda Cezar
Srijita Chandra
Cesar Corzo
Bret Crim
Franco Matias Ferreyra
Paulo Fioravante
Phillip Gauger
Jordan Gebhard
Daniel Linhares
Edison Sousa Magalhães
Rodger G. Main
Marta Mainenti
Rob McGaughey
Hemant Naikare
Jamie Retallick
Albert Rovira
Kinath Rupasinghe
Christopher Siepker
Ana Paula Serafini Poeta Silva
Gustavo Silva
Mary Thurn
Giovani Trevisan
Michael Zeller
Publication date
5 July 2024
Publisher
PLOS ONE
Abstract
This study evaluated the use of endemic enteric coronaviruses polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-negative testing results as an alternative approach to detect the emergence of animal health threats with similar clinical diseases presentation. This retrospective study, conducted in the United States, used PCR-negative testing results from porcine samples tested at six veterinary diagnostic laboratories. As a proof of concept, the database was first searched for transmissible gastroenteritis virus (TGEV) negative submissions between January 1st, 2010, through April 29th, 2013, when the first porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDV) case was diagnosed. Secondly, TGEV- and PEDV-negative submissions were used to detect the porcine delta coronavirus (PDCoV) emergence in 2014. Lastly, encountered best detection algorithms were implemented to prospectively monitor the 2023 enteric coronavirus-negative submissions. Time series (weekly TGEV-negative counts) and Seasonal Autoregressive-Integrated Moving-Average (SARIMA) were used to control for outliers, trends, and seasonality. The SARIMA’s fitted and residuals were then subjected to anomaly detection algorithms (EARS, EWMA, CUSUM, Farrington) to identify alarms, defined as weeks of higher TGEV-negativity than what was predicted by models preceding the PEDV emergence. The best-performing detection algorithms had the lowest false alarms (number of alarms detected during the baseline) and highest time to detect (number of weeks between the first alarm and PEDV emergence). The best-performing detection algorithms were CUSUM, EWMA, and Farrington flexible using SARIMA fitted values, having a lower false alarm rate and identified alarms 4 to 17 weeks before PEDV and PDCoV emergences. No alarms were identified in the 2023 enteric negative testing results. The negative-based monitoring system functioned in the case of PEDV propagating epidemic and in the presence of a concurrent propagating epidemic with the PDCoV emergence. It demonstrated its applicability as an additional tool for diagnostic data monitoring of emergent pathogens having similar clinical disease as the monitored endemic pathogens.This article is published as Serafini Poeta Silva, Ana Paula, Guilherme Arruda Cezar, Edison Sousa Magalhães, Kinath Rupasinghe, Srijita Chandra, Gustavo S. Silva, Marcelo Almeida et al. "Monitoring emerging pathogens using negative nucleic acid test results from endemic pathogens in pig populations: Application to porcine enteric coronaviruses." PloS one 19, no. 7 (2024): e0306532. doi: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0306532. © 2024 Serafini Poeta Silva et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
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Last time updated on 10/09/2024