Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB) is more than 3 million years old thriving in multiple species. Ancestral Mycobacterium tuberculosis gave rise to multiple strains including Mycobacterium bovis now distributed worldwide with zoonotic transmission happening in both directions between animals and humans. M. bovis in milk caused problems with a significant number of deaths in children under 5 years of age due largely to extrapulmonary TB. This risk was effectively mitigated with widespread milk pasteurization during the twentieth century, and fewer young children were lost to TB. Koch developed tuberculin in 1890 and recognizing the possibility of using tuberculin to detect infected animals the first tests were quickly developed. Bovine TB (bTB) control/eradication programmes followed in the late nineteenth century/early twentieth century. Many scientists collaborated and contributed to the development of tuberculin tests, to refining and optimizing the production and standardization of tuberculin and to determining test sensitivity and specificity using various methodologies and injection sites. The WHO, OIE, and EU have set legal standards for tuberculin production, potency assay performance, and intradermal tests for bovines. Now, those using tuberculin tests for bTB control/eradication programmes rarely, see TB as a disease. Notwithstanding the launch of the first-ever roadmap to combat zoonotic TB, many wonder if bTB is actually a problem? Is there a better way of dealing with bTB? Might alternative skin test sites make the test “better” and easier to perform? Are all tuberculins used for testing equally good? Why have alternative “better” tests not been developed? This review was prompted by these types of questions. This article attempts to succinctly summarize the data in the literature from the late nineteenth century to date to show why TB, and zoonotic TB specifically, was and still is important as a “One Health” concern, and that the necessity to reduce the burden of zoonotic TB, to save lives and secure livelihoods is far too important to await the possible future development of novel diagnostic assays for livestock before renewing efforts to eliminate it. Consequently, it is highly probable that the tuberculin skin test will remain the screening test of choice for farmed livestock for the considerable future.

Highlights

  • Gustavo Machado, University of Minnesota, Specialty section: This article was submitted to Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics, a section of the journal Frontiers in Veterinary Science

  • Bovine TB control/eradication programmes followed in the late nineteenth century/early twentieth century

  • Notwithstanding the launch of the first-ever roadmap to combat zoonotic TB, many wonder if Bovine TB (bTB) is a problem? Is there a better way of dealing with bTB? Might alternative skin test sites make the test “better” and easier to perform? Are all tuberculins used for testing good? Why have alternative “better” tests not been developed? This review was prompted by these types of questions

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Summary

TB IN A SOCIAL CONTEXT

Outbreaks of TB in humans peaked with a prevalence as high as 900 deaths per 100,000 of population between the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as primarily farming, rural societies in Europe and America became industrial and urban when, during the industrial revolution, field workers moved to the cities in search of work. The fall from 1,107 deaths in 1921 to 12 deaths in 1953 was much more marked than the equivalent reduction in deaths from other non-pulmonary forms of tuberculosis This was attributed to the development of ‘safe’ milk in the intervening years, due to a combination of pasteurization and control of M. bovis infection in cattle.”. In Ireland in 2005, a case was detected involving two children infected by a cow with only a high somatic cell count as evidence of the presence of M. bovis in her milk [25] In this case, all milk supplied from the herd was pasteurized, and raw milk consumption was only a zoonotic risk to the farm family. There were 834 cases in South Africa and 852 in Lesotho per 100,000 population, i.e., an average 281 cases per 100,000 people in the region or more than double the global average of 133 [3, 45]

TB IN CATTLE
TUBERCULIN TEST DEVELOPMENT
IMPEDIMENTS TO THE ERADICATION OF TB IN BOVINES
ONE HEALTH
CONCLUSION
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
Full Text
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