Published Date: 2018-06-26 14:23:09
Subject: PRO/AH/EDR> Foot & mouth disease - Palestinian Auth (02): (WE) bovine, st not typed, OIE
Archive Number: 20180626.5877233

FOOT & MOUTH DISEASE - PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY (02): (WEST BANK) BOVINE, SEROTYPE NOT TYPED, OIE

A ProMED-mail post http://www.promedmail.org
ProMED-mail is a program of the International Society for Infectious Diseases http://www.isid.org

Date: Wed 20 Jun 2018
Source: OIE, WAHID (World Animal Health Information Database), weekly disease information 2018; 31(25) [edited] http://www.oie.int/wahis_2/public/wahid.php/Reviewreport/Review?page_refer=MapFullEventReport&reportid=26989


Foot-and-mouth disease [FMD], Palestinian Auton. Territories
------------------------------------------------------------
Information received on [and dated] 20 Jun 2018 from Dr Iyad Adra, Director General of Veterinary Services & Animal Health, CVO, Ministry of Agriculture, Ramallah, Palestinian Auton. Territories

Report type: immediate notification
Date of start of the event: 17 Jun 2018
Date of confirmation of the event: 20 Jun 2018
Reason for notification: recurrence of a listed disease
Date of previous occurrence: 30 Jan 2018
Manifestation of disease: clinical disease
Causal agent: Foot and mouth disease virus
Serotype: not typed
Nature of diagnosis: clinical, laboratory (basic)
This event pertains a defined zone within the country.

New outbreaks (1)
Outbreak 1: West Bank, Sielet Aldaher [Silat ad-Dhahr], Jenin, West Bank
Date of start of the outbreak: 17 Jun 2018
Outbreak status: continuing (or date resolved not provided)
Epidemiological unit: farm
Affected animals:
Species / Susceptible / Cases / Deaths / Killed and disposed of / Slaughtered
Cattle / 62 / 8 / 0 / 0 / 0

Summary of outbreaks
Total outbreaks: 1
Total animals affected:
Species / Susceptible / Cases / Deaths / Killed and disposed of / Slaughtered
Cattle / 62 / 8 / 0 / 0 / 0
Outbreak statistics [rates apparent, expressed as percentages]:
Species / Morbidity rate / Mortality rate / Case fatality rate / Proportion susceptible animals lost*
Cattle / 12.90 / 0 / 0 / 0
* Removed from the susceptible population

Epidemiology
Source of the outbreak(s) or origin of infection: unknown or inconclusive
Epidemiological comment: the owner newly introduced straw from a new source to his farm.

Control measures
Measures applied: movement control inside the country; surveillance outside containment and/or protection zone; surveillance within containment and/or protection zone; screening; traceability; quarantine; control of wildlife reservoirs; zoning; disinfection; no treatment of affected animals
Vaccination in response to the outbreak(s):
Administrative division / Species / Total vaccinated
West Bank / cattle / 100
Measures to be applied: no other measures

Diagnostic test results
Laboratory name and type: Central Veterinary laboratory (national laboratory)
Species / Test / Test date / Result
Cattle / real-time PCR / 20 Jun 2018 / positive

Future reporting
The event is continuing. Weekly follow-up reports will be submitted.

[The location of this outbreak can be seen on the interactive map included in the OIE report at the source URL above.]

--
Communicated by:
ProMED-mail
<promed@promedmail.org>

[On the same date (20 Jun 2018) as the immediate notification above of a new FMD event, the CVO of the Palestinian Auton. Territories (PAT) submitted to the OIE a follow-up report no. 3 (aka "final report") of an earlier FMD event. The said event involved 5 outbreaks in sheep, goats, and cattle in Hebron district, the south-western part of the West Bank, PAT, which started 3 Nov 2017; the last (5th) outbreak started 20 Dec 2017. This event has now been informed as resolved since 30 Jan 2018. For the event's summary, including a map presenting the 5 outbreaks, see http://www.oie.int/wahis_2/public/wahid.php/Reviewreport/Review/viewsummary?fupser=&dothis=&reportid=25419.

The virus which caused the above-mentioned November-December 2017 PAT event was genotyped by WRLFMD as FMDV serotype O, topotype EA3, a virus strain known to circulate in several east-African countries and in neighboring Egypt. The detailed genotyping results are available at http://www.wrlfmd.org/fmd_genotyping/2018/WRLFMD-2018-00004-Palestinian-AT-O-approved.pdf. This virus strain had caused, earlier in 2017, several outbreaks in the Gaza strip and entered Israel, infecting a single cattle operation adjacent to the Gaza strip (see 20170404.4947711).

Silat ad-Dhahr, the location of the new outbreak reported in the immediate notification above, is a Palestinian village in the Jenin governorate, 14 km (about 9 mi) east to the demarcation line ("green line") between the Palestinian Authority and Israel's territories, midway between Jenin and Nablus, and 30-35 km (about 19-22 mi) from the closest recent FMD outbreak in north east Israel (map at https://tinyurl.com/yah9jpgj). It is more than 90 km/about 56 mi (and 7 months) distant from the earlier FMD cluster in the Palestinian Authority (Hebron district); the current virus strain could rather be related to the recent outbreak in North-East Israel, where a new FMD event, caused by a newly introduced FMDV-O strain (topotype ME-SA, lineage PanAsia-2QOM-15) started, reportedly, on 2 Apr 2018, in the vicinity of the 3-country junction (Israel/Jordan/Syria).

Until 29 Apr 2018 (date of Israel's last follow-up report), a total of 5 outbreaks, due to the said newly introduced virus strain, have been reported to the OIE. The event's last summary with map are available at http://www.oie.int/wahis_2/public/wahid.php/Reviewreport/Review/viewsummary?fupser=&dothis=&reportid=26394.

Additional outbreaks have been noted in the same region in cattle and wildlife (wild gazelles, a captive deer), as far west as Affula, (see 20180515.5798415 and 20180607.5843979).

The virus strain behind the current outbreak in Silat ad-Dhahr is yet to be serotyped and genotyped. In case it is found identical/similar to the strain (FMDV-O EA3) circulating in north-east Israel, this may be indicative of wide continuing circulation of this virus in territories west to the Jordan river. Particularly, if the cows were infected, as suggested by the owner, by "newly introduced straw from a new source to his farm."

Enhanced surveillance and alertness in Jordan and Syria should be in place. - Mods.AS/CRD

HealthMap/ProMED-mail map
Silat al-Dahr, West Bank, Palestine: http://healthmap.org/promed/p/33331]