Limited impact of influenza A virus vaccination of piglets in an enzootic infected sow herd

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Limited impact of influenza A virus vaccination of piglets in an enzootic infected sow herd. / Ryt-Hansen, Pia; Larsen, Inge; Kristensen, Charlotte Sonne; Krog, Jesper Schak; Larsen, Lars Erik.

I: Research in Veterinary Science, Bind 127, 2019, s. 47-56.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Ryt-Hansen, P, Larsen, I, Kristensen, CS, Krog, JS & Larsen, LE 2019, 'Limited impact of influenza A virus vaccination of piglets in an enzootic infected sow herd', Research in Veterinary Science, bind 127, s. 47-56. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rvsc.2019.10.015

APA

Ryt-Hansen, P., Larsen, I., Kristensen, C. S., Krog, J. S., & Larsen, L. E. (2019). Limited impact of influenza A virus vaccination of piglets in an enzootic infected sow herd. Research in Veterinary Science, 127, 47-56. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rvsc.2019.10.015

Vancouver

Ryt-Hansen P, Larsen I, Kristensen CS, Krog JS, Larsen LE. Limited impact of influenza A virus vaccination of piglets in an enzootic infected sow herd. Research in Veterinary Science. 2019;127:47-56. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rvsc.2019.10.015

Author

Ryt-Hansen, Pia ; Larsen, Inge ; Kristensen, Charlotte Sonne ; Krog, Jesper Schak ; Larsen, Lars Erik. / Limited impact of influenza A virus vaccination of piglets in an enzootic infected sow herd. I: Research in Veterinary Science. 2019 ; Bind 127. s. 47-56.

Bibtex

@article{a5e4b42f6b964c1c875983a825a944d3,
title = "Limited impact of influenza A virus vaccination of piglets in an enzootic infected sow herd",
abstract = "Recent studies have questioned the effect of maternal derived antibodies (MDAs) to protect piglets against infection with influenza A virus (IAV). The lack of protection against IAV infections provided by MDAs has encouraged alternative vaccination strategies targeting young piglets in an attempt to stimulate an early antibody response. There is a lack of studies documenting the efficacy of piglet vaccination. In the present study, we monitored a group of vaccinated and non-vaccinated piglets in a Danish sow herd that initiated piglet vaccination with ¼ dose of an inactivated swine influenza vaccine at the time of castration (day 3–4). A total of 160 piglets from 11 sows were included and either vaccinated with 0.5 mL inactivated swine influenza vaccine or sham-vaccinated. From week 0 until week 6, all included piglets were clinically examined and nasal swapped once per week and weighed at weeks 0, 3 and 6. Blood samples were collected from sows at week 0 and from piglets at week 3. Vaccination of piglets had limited effect on clinical signs, body weight, antibody development and viral shedding, within the first 6 weeks of life. At least 50% of all pigs of each treatment group tested positive for IAV at week 2, and very early onset of IAV shedding was observed. In total, 18 pigs were IAV positive in nasal swabs for more than one consecutive sampling time indicating prolonged shedding and 14 pigs were IAV positive with negative samplings in between indicating re-infection with the same IAV strain.",
keywords = "Influenza a virus, Influenza vaccination, Piglet vaccination, Recurrent shedding, Reinfection, Swine influenza",
author = "Pia Ryt-Hansen and Inge Larsen and Kristensen, {Charlotte Sonne} and Krog, {Jesper Schak} and Larsen, {Lars Erik}",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1016/j.rvsc.2019.10.015",
language = "English",
volume = "127",
pages = "47--56",
journal = "Research in Veterinary Science",
issn = "0034-5288",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Limited impact of influenza A virus vaccination of piglets in an enzootic infected sow herd

AU - Ryt-Hansen, Pia

AU - Larsen, Inge

AU - Kristensen, Charlotte Sonne

AU - Krog, Jesper Schak

AU - Larsen, Lars Erik

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Recent studies have questioned the effect of maternal derived antibodies (MDAs) to protect piglets against infection with influenza A virus (IAV). The lack of protection against IAV infections provided by MDAs has encouraged alternative vaccination strategies targeting young piglets in an attempt to stimulate an early antibody response. There is a lack of studies documenting the efficacy of piglet vaccination. In the present study, we monitored a group of vaccinated and non-vaccinated piglets in a Danish sow herd that initiated piglet vaccination with ¼ dose of an inactivated swine influenza vaccine at the time of castration (day 3–4). A total of 160 piglets from 11 sows were included and either vaccinated with 0.5 mL inactivated swine influenza vaccine or sham-vaccinated. From week 0 until week 6, all included piglets were clinically examined and nasal swapped once per week and weighed at weeks 0, 3 and 6. Blood samples were collected from sows at week 0 and from piglets at week 3. Vaccination of piglets had limited effect on clinical signs, body weight, antibody development and viral shedding, within the first 6 weeks of life. At least 50% of all pigs of each treatment group tested positive for IAV at week 2, and very early onset of IAV shedding was observed. In total, 18 pigs were IAV positive in nasal swabs for more than one consecutive sampling time indicating prolonged shedding and 14 pigs were IAV positive with negative samplings in between indicating re-infection with the same IAV strain.

AB - Recent studies have questioned the effect of maternal derived antibodies (MDAs) to protect piglets against infection with influenza A virus (IAV). The lack of protection against IAV infections provided by MDAs has encouraged alternative vaccination strategies targeting young piglets in an attempt to stimulate an early antibody response. There is a lack of studies documenting the efficacy of piglet vaccination. In the present study, we monitored a group of vaccinated and non-vaccinated piglets in a Danish sow herd that initiated piglet vaccination with ¼ dose of an inactivated swine influenza vaccine at the time of castration (day 3–4). A total of 160 piglets from 11 sows were included and either vaccinated with 0.5 mL inactivated swine influenza vaccine or sham-vaccinated. From week 0 until week 6, all included piglets were clinically examined and nasal swapped once per week and weighed at weeks 0, 3 and 6. Blood samples were collected from sows at week 0 and from piglets at week 3. Vaccination of piglets had limited effect on clinical signs, body weight, antibody development and viral shedding, within the first 6 weeks of life. At least 50% of all pigs of each treatment group tested positive for IAV at week 2, and very early onset of IAV shedding was observed. In total, 18 pigs were IAV positive in nasal swabs for more than one consecutive sampling time indicating prolonged shedding and 14 pigs were IAV positive with negative samplings in between indicating re-infection with the same IAV strain.

KW - Influenza a virus

KW - Influenza vaccination

KW - Piglet vaccination

KW - Recurrent shedding

KW - Reinfection

KW - Swine influenza

U2 - 10.1016/j.rvsc.2019.10.015

DO - 10.1016/j.rvsc.2019.10.015

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31677416

AN - SCOPUS:85074154488

VL - 127

SP - 47

EP - 56

JO - Research in Veterinary Science

JF - Research in Veterinary Science

SN - 0034-5288

ER -

ID: 230689780