First expert elicitation of knowledge on drivers of emergence of the
COVID-19 in pets
Abstract
Infection with the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2
(SARS-CoV-2) induces the coronavirus infectious disease 19 (COVID-19).
Its pandemic form in human population and its probable animal origin,
along with recent case reports in pets, make drivers of emergence
crucial in carnivore domestic pets, especially cats, dogs and ferrets.
Few data are available in these species; we first listed forty-six
possible drivers of emergence of COVID-19 in pets, regrouped in eight
domains (i.e. pathogen/disease characteristics, spatial-temporal
distance of outbreaks, ability to monitor, disease treatment and
control, characteristics of pets, changes in climate conditions,
wildlife interface, human activity, and economic and trade activities).
Secondly, we developed a scoring system per driver, then elicited
experts (N = 33) to: (i) allocate a score to each driver, (ii) weight
the drivers scores within each domain and (iii) weight the different
domains between them. Thirdly, an overall weighted score per driver was
calculated; drivers were ranked in decreasing order. Fourthly, a
regression tree analysis was used to group drivers with comparable
likelihood to play a role in the emergence of COVID-19 in pets. Finally,
the robustness of the expert elicitation was verified. Five drivers were
ranked with the highest probability to play a key role in the emergence
of COVID-19 in pets: availability and quality of diagnostic tools, human
density close to pets, ability of preventive/control measures to avoid
the disease introduction or spread in a country (except treatment,
vaccination and reservoir(s) control), current species specificity of
the disease causing agent and current knowledge on the pathogen. As
scientific knowledge on the topic is scarce and still uncertain, expert
elicitation of knowledge, in addition with clustering and sensitivity
analyses, is of prime importance to prioritize future studies, starting
from the top five drivers. The present methodology is applicable to
other emerging pet diseases.