AI Article Synopsis

  • - The African swine fever virus (ASFV) has been present in the Baltic countries and eastern Poland since 2014, prompting an update of the virus's epidemiological analysis in the EU by EFSA, utilizing recent data to gauge the spread and risk factors of ASF.
  • - Outbreaks in wild boar are currently classified as small-scale epidemics, expanding slowly (1 to 2 km/month), with a peak in positive samples during winter hunting seasons and another peak in summer for wild boar found dead, suggesting different factors influencing these trends.
  • - Overall virus prevalence in hunted wild boar is low (0.04-3%), while dead wild boar show a much higher virus prevalence (60%-

Article Abstract

African swine fever virus (ASFV) has been notified in the Baltic countries and the eastern part of Poland from the beginning of 2014 up to now. In collaboration with the ASF-affected Member States (MS), EFSA is updating the epidemiological analysis of ASF in the European Union which was carried out in 2015. For this purpose, the latest epidemiological and laboratory data were analysed in order to identify the spatial-temporal pattern of the epidemic and a risk factors facilitating its spread. Currently, the ASF outbreaks in wild boar in the Baltic countries and Poland can be defined as a small-scale epidemic with a slow average spatial spread in wild boar subpopulations (approximately from 1 in Lithuania and Poland to 2 km/month in Estonia and Latvia). The number of positive samples in hunted wild boar peaks in winter which can be explained by human activity patterns (significant hunting activity over winter). The number of positive samples in wild boar found dead peaks in summer. This could be related to the epidemiology of the disease and/or the biology of wild boar; however, this needs further investigation. Virus prevalence in hunted wild boar is very low (0.04-3%), without any apparent trend over time. Apparent virus prevalence at country level in wild boar found dead in affected countries ranges from 60% to 86%, with the exception of Poland, where values between 0.5% and 1.42%, were observed. Since the beginning of the epidemic, the apparent antibody prevalence in hunted wild boar has always been lower than the apparent virus prevalence, indicating an unchanged epidemiological/immunological situation. The risk factor analysis shows an association between the number of settlements, human and domestic pigs population size or wild boar population density and the presence of ASF in wild boar for Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7010137PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2903/j.efsa.2017.4732DOI Listing

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