BSE in sheep: first estimates of human death toll
The first attempt to estimate the human health risk from possible BSE infection of the British sheep flock is published today by researchers from Imperial College, London.
They show that while the present risk of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD) from eating sheep could be greater than that from cattle, the overall historical risk from sheep is much less than that from cattle.
The research, which is reported in the journal Nature (1), follows the failure of a recent study to determine whether sheep carry the infectious prion thought responsible for BSE.
The study, by a team from the Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology at Imperial College, predicts that the future number of deaths from vCJD due to exposure from BSE in cattle alone lies between 50 and 50,000. The upper estimate is lower than previous figures provided by the Imperial team but is substantially greater than estimates from other scientific groups reported in October 2001.
The additional risk from sheep has a limited impact on these figures except in the ‘worst-case’ scenario of a growing sheep epidemic, in which case the range of possible future numbers of deaths increases to between 110 and 150,000.
Professor Neil Ferguson OBE, leader of the research team, said:
"Our latest analysis shows that the current risk from sheep could be greater than that from cattle, due to the more intensive controls in place to protect human health from exposure to infected cattle, as compared with sheep. However, more optimistically, our analysis shows that the overall historical risk from sheep was much less than that from cattle."
The authors explore potential risk-reduction strategies similar to those in place for cattle, including:
Combining these controls is estimated to reduce current and future risk by up to 90 per cent for all three sheep BSE scenarios they considered.
"We find that if tissue- and age-based risk-reduction measurements, such as those put in place for cattle, were adopted, the current and future risk could be reduced by up to 90 per cent," said Professor Ferguson.
Professor Ferguson acknowledged that many uncertainties remain in performing this type of study, due to the limited data available on BSE in sheep:
"Our estimates are ultimately dependent on the quality and quantity of information that is gathered by other researchers and we feel that large-scale testing of the national flock, and additional experimental research are urgent priorities."
The report concludes by calling for further urgent research to:
The mathematical model developed by the research team incorporated data on how infectiousness develops in sheep and was applied to three different scenarios: a `worst-case` whereby BSE spreads both within and between flocks; a situation where BSE spreads only within a flock but not between flocks; and a `best case` where BSE does not spread either within or between flocks.
The research was undertaken in order to pull together the limited and disparate existing information into a single integrated model. This, say the authors should help prioritise future data collection and inform policy makers.
"We were not trying to evaluate the probability that BSE has entered the sheep flock, but rather, given the pessimistic assumption that infection has occurred, to explore its potential extent and pattern of spread," said Professor Ferguson.
The research was funded by the UK Food Standards Agency.
Tom Miller | Source: alphagalileo
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