Outbreak-specific monovalent/bivalent vaccination to control and eradicate virulent ovine footrot.

Vaccine

Farm Animal and Veterinary Public Health, Faculty of Veterinary Science, The University of Sydney, 425 Werombi Road, Camden, NSW 2570, Australia.

Published: March 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Footrot is a contagious disease in sheep and goats caused by the bacterium Dichelobacter nodosus, leading to significant economic losses and animal welfare concerns.
  • Vaccination is available but is complicated by the fact that immunity is specific to one of the 10 serogroups of the bacterium, meaning single or dual serogroup vaccines are more effective than those that try to cover all 10.
  • A study on 12 farms in southeast Australia found that using these targeted vaccines effectively eradicated virulent footrot in several flocks, demonstrating that tailored vaccination strategies can control and eliminate this disease.

Article Abstract

Footrot is a contagious disease of small ruminants which is caused by the bacterium Dichelobacter nodosus. In its virulent form there are severe economic losses and a very significant animal welfare issue. Sheep and goats can be vaccinated for treatment and prevention of the disease. There are 10 different serogroups of D. nodosus (A-I and M) and immunity is serogroup-specific. When all 10 serogroups are presented together in a vaccine, protection persists for only a few months due to "antigenic competition". Consequently we evaluated the use of sequential monovalent or bivalent vaccines to control/eliminate/eradicate virulent footrot in a longitudinal intervention study on 12 commercial farms in southeast Australia with flock sizes of approximately 1200-4200 sheep. Overall, virulent footrot was eradicated from 4 of the flocks, 2 of which had 2 serogroups, and the others 4 or 5 serogroups. Where there were only 1 or 2 serogroups (3 farms) the clinical response was rapid and dramatic; prevalence was reduced from 45 to 50% before vaccination to 0% (2 farms) or 0.4% (1 farm) after one round of vaccination. In the remaining 9 flocks there were more than 2 serogroups and successive bivalent vaccines were administered leading to eradication of virulent footrot on 2 farms over 4 years and control of the disease on all but 3 of the others. Of the latter farms, 1 discontinued, and 2 initially had poor response to vaccine due to misdiagnosis of serogroup 'M', which was previously unknown in Australia. Control was achieved after administration of a serogroup M vaccine. These results provide clear evidence for control, elimination and eradication of virulent footrot by outbreak-specific vaccination in Australia.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2013.01.043DOI Listing

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