Long-Term Residual Infection as a Source of Bovine Tuberculosis Reemergence: A Phylogenetic and Epidemiological Investigation of Recurrent Outbreaks
Bernat Pérez de Val, Mariano Domingo, Alberto Allepuz, Carles Riera, Albert Sanz, Miquel Nofrarías, Sergio López-Soria, Enric Vidal

TL;DR
This study investigates how long-term residual infections in cattle can cause bovine tuberculosis to reemerge, even after successful eradication efforts.
Contribution
The study identifies residual infection in cattle as a key source of bovine TB reemergence through phylogenetic and epidemiological analysis.
Findings
A cattle herd was identified as the likely source linking two outbreaks of bovine TB over nine years apart.
Residual infections in cattle were found to transmit Mycobacterium bovis to wild boars.
The study highlights the importance of investigating reemerging strains for effective TB control.
Abstract
Bovine tuberculosis (TB), primarily caused by Mycobacterium bovis, is a chronic infectious disease of cattle with significant public health and economic implications due to its zoonotic potential and impact on livestock productivity. The control of the disease is hindered by complex epidemiological dynamics and the chronic, and often slow-progressing nature of the disease. The recurrent outbreaks of bovine TB in endemic areas are common and threaten the success of eradication programs. To address this issue, long-term reemergent outbreaks in Catalonia (Northeastern Spain) were retrospectively investigated in depth. In 2009, an outbreak caused by M. bovis spoligotype SB0120 was detected in four extensively managed cattle herds. Following intensive eradication measures, all herds recovered the officially TB-free status by 2012. In 2021, 9 years later, a new outbreak involving the same…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTuberculosis Research and Epidemiology · Mycobacterium research and diagnosis · Diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis
