Abstract

One year after the first autochthonous transmission of West Nile virus (WNV) to birds and horses in Germany, an epizootic emergence of WNV was again observed in 2019. The number of infected birds and horses was considerably higher compared to 2018 (12 birds, two horses), resulting in the observation of the first WNV epidemy in Germany: 76 cases in birds, 36 in horses and five confirmed mosquito-borne, autochthonous human cases. We demonstrated that Germany experienced several WNV introduction events and that strains of a distinct group (Eastern German WNV clade), which was introduced to Germany as a single introduction event, dominated mosquito, birds, horse and human-related virus variants in 2018 and 2019. Virus strains in this clade are characterized by a specific-Lys2114Arg mutation, which might lead to an increase in viral fitness. Extraordinary high temperatures in 2018/2019 allowed a low extrinsic incubation period (EIP), which drove the epizootic emergence and, in the end, most likely triggered the 2019 epidemic. Spatiotemporal EIP values correlated with the geographical WNV incidence. This study highlights the risk of a further spread in Germany in the next years with additional human WNV infections. Thus, surveillance of birds is essential to provide an early epidemic warning and thus, initiate targeted control measures.

Highlights

  • West Nile virus (WNV, family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus) is maintained in a transmission cycle between birds as amplification hosts and mosquito vectors [1]

  • We report a WNV epidemic in Germany, 2019, triggered by an epizootic emergence among birds with spillover to horses and humans

  • A total of 88 birds and 38 horses tested positive for WNV in 2018

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Summary

Introduction

West Nile virus (WNV, family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus) is maintained in a transmission cycle between birds as amplification hosts and mosquito vectors [1]. Spillover events have significant public health and veterinary relevance [2]. A total of 25% of the infected people develop West Nile fever (WNF) and become symptomatic (e.g., headache or muscle pain) [3]. Severe disease progressions manifesting as WNV neuroinvasive disease (WNND) are rare (

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