Cargando…

A longitudinal survey of African swine fever in Uganda reveals high apparent disease incidence rates in domestic pigs, but absence of detectable persistent virus infections in blood and serum

BACKGROUND: African swine fever (ASF) is a fatal, haemorrhagic disease of domestic pigs, that poses a serious threat to pig farmers and is currently endemic in domestic pigs in most of sub-Saharan Africa. To obtain insight into the factors related to ASF outbreaks at the farm-level, a longitudinal s...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Muhangi, Denis, Masembe, Charles, Emanuelson, Ulf, Boqvist, Sofia, Mayega, Lawrence, Ademun, Rose Okurut, Bishop, Richard P, Ocaido, Michael, Berg, Mikael, Ståhl, Karl
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4432512/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25967670
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12917-015-0426-5
_version_ 1782371491654926336
author Muhangi, Denis
Masembe, Charles
Emanuelson, Ulf
Boqvist, Sofia
Mayega, Lawrence
Ademun, Rose Okurut
Bishop, Richard P
Ocaido, Michael
Berg, Mikael
Ståhl, Karl
author_facet Muhangi, Denis
Masembe, Charles
Emanuelson, Ulf
Boqvist, Sofia
Mayega, Lawrence
Ademun, Rose Okurut
Bishop, Richard P
Ocaido, Michael
Berg, Mikael
Ståhl, Karl
author_sort Muhangi, Denis
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: African swine fever (ASF) is a fatal, haemorrhagic disease of domestic pigs, that poses a serious threat to pig farmers and is currently endemic in domestic pigs in most of sub-Saharan Africa. To obtain insight into the factors related to ASF outbreaks at the farm-level, a longitudinal study was performed in one of the major pig producing areas in central Uganda. Potential risk factors associated with outbreaks of ASF were investigated including the possible presence of apparently healthy ASF-virus (ASFV) infected pigs, which could act as long-term carriers of the virus. Blood and serum were sampled from 715 pigs (241 farms) and 649 pigs (233 farms) to investigate presence of ASFV and antibodies, during the periods of June-October 2010 and March-June 2011, respectively. To determine the potential contribution of different risks to ASF spread, a questionnaire-based survey was administered to farmers to assess the association between ASF outbreaks during the study period and the risk factors. RESULTS: Fifty-one (21 %) and 13 (5.6 %) farms reported an ASF outbreak on their farms in the previous one to two years and during the study period, respectively. The incidence rate for ASF prior to the study period was estimated at 14.1 per 100 pig farm-years and 5.6 per 100 pig farm-years during the study. Three pigs tested positive for ASFV using real-time PCR, but none tested positive for ASFV specific antibodies using two different commercial ELISA tests. CONCLUSIONS: There was no evidence for existence of pigs that were long-term carriers for the virus based on the analysis of blood and serum as there were no seropositive pigs and the only three ASFV DNA positive pigs were acutely infected and were linked to outbreaks reported by farmers during the study. Potential ASF risk factors were present on both small and medium-scale pig farms, although small scale farms exhibited a higher proportion with multiple potential risk factors (like borrowing boars for sows mating, buying replacement from neighboring farms without ascertaining health status, etc) and did not implement any biosecurity measures. However, no risk factors were significantly associated with ASF reports during the study.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4432512
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-44325122015-05-16 A longitudinal survey of African swine fever in Uganda reveals high apparent disease incidence rates in domestic pigs, but absence of detectable persistent virus infections in blood and serum Muhangi, Denis Masembe, Charles Emanuelson, Ulf Boqvist, Sofia Mayega, Lawrence Ademun, Rose Okurut Bishop, Richard P Ocaido, Michael Berg, Mikael Ståhl, Karl BMC Vet Res Research Article BACKGROUND: African swine fever (ASF) is a fatal, haemorrhagic disease of domestic pigs, that poses a serious threat to pig farmers and is currently endemic in domestic pigs in most of sub-Saharan Africa. To obtain insight into the factors related to ASF outbreaks at the farm-level, a longitudinal study was performed in one of the major pig producing areas in central Uganda. Potential risk factors associated with outbreaks of ASF were investigated including the possible presence of apparently healthy ASF-virus (ASFV) infected pigs, which could act as long-term carriers of the virus. Blood and serum were sampled from 715 pigs (241 farms) and 649 pigs (233 farms) to investigate presence of ASFV and antibodies, during the periods of June-October 2010 and March-June 2011, respectively. To determine the potential contribution of different risks to ASF spread, a questionnaire-based survey was administered to farmers to assess the association between ASF outbreaks during the study period and the risk factors. RESULTS: Fifty-one (21 %) and 13 (5.6 %) farms reported an ASF outbreak on their farms in the previous one to two years and during the study period, respectively. The incidence rate for ASF prior to the study period was estimated at 14.1 per 100 pig farm-years and 5.6 per 100 pig farm-years during the study. Three pigs tested positive for ASFV using real-time PCR, but none tested positive for ASFV specific antibodies using two different commercial ELISA tests. CONCLUSIONS: There was no evidence for existence of pigs that were long-term carriers for the virus based on the analysis of blood and serum as there were no seropositive pigs and the only three ASFV DNA positive pigs were acutely infected and were linked to outbreaks reported by farmers during the study. Potential ASF risk factors were present on both small and medium-scale pig farms, although small scale farms exhibited a higher proportion with multiple potential risk factors (like borrowing boars for sows mating, buying replacement from neighboring farms without ascertaining health status, etc) and did not implement any biosecurity measures. However, no risk factors were significantly associated with ASF reports during the study. BioMed Central 2015-05-13 /pmc/articles/PMC4432512/ /pubmed/25967670 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12917-015-0426-5 Text en © Muhangi et al.; licensee BioMed Central. 2015 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Muhangi, Denis
Masembe, Charles
Emanuelson, Ulf
Boqvist, Sofia
Mayega, Lawrence
Ademun, Rose Okurut
Bishop, Richard P
Ocaido, Michael
Berg, Mikael
Ståhl, Karl
A longitudinal survey of African swine fever in Uganda reveals high apparent disease incidence rates in domestic pigs, but absence of detectable persistent virus infections in blood and serum
title A longitudinal survey of African swine fever in Uganda reveals high apparent disease incidence rates in domestic pigs, but absence of detectable persistent virus infections in blood and serum
title_full A longitudinal survey of African swine fever in Uganda reveals high apparent disease incidence rates in domestic pigs, but absence of detectable persistent virus infections in blood and serum
title_fullStr A longitudinal survey of African swine fever in Uganda reveals high apparent disease incidence rates in domestic pigs, but absence of detectable persistent virus infections in blood and serum
title_full_unstemmed A longitudinal survey of African swine fever in Uganda reveals high apparent disease incidence rates in domestic pigs, but absence of detectable persistent virus infections in blood and serum
title_short A longitudinal survey of African swine fever in Uganda reveals high apparent disease incidence rates in domestic pigs, but absence of detectable persistent virus infections in blood and serum
title_sort longitudinal survey of african swine fever in uganda reveals high apparent disease incidence rates in domestic pigs, but absence of detectable persistent virus infections in blood and serum
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4432512/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25967670
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12917-015-0426-5
work_keys_str_mv AT muhangidenis alongitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT masembecharles alongitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT emanuelsonulf alongitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT boqvistsofia alongitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT mayegalawrence alongitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT ademunroseokurut alongitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT bishoprichardp alongitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT ocaidomichael alongitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT bergmikael alongitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT stahlkarl alongitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT muhangidenis longitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT masembecharles longitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT emanuelsonulf longitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT boqvistsofia longitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT mayegalawrence longitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT ademunroseokurut longitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT bishoprichardp longitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT ocaidomichael longitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT bergmikael longitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum
AT stahlkarl longitudinalsurveyofafricanswinefeverinugandarevealshighapparentdiseaseincidenceratesindomesticpigsbutabsenceofdetectablepersistentvirusinfectionsinbloodandserum