AI Article Synopsis

  • African swine fever virus (ASFV) is spreading globally, and there's currently no effective treatment or vaccine, making understanding its transmission crucial for planning responses.
  • This study analyzed ASFV transmission parameters using controlled inoculation data from pigs and developed three models to assess different infectiousness over varying latency periods.
  • The results indicated that the binary model fits well with latency periods of 4-5 days, while the piecewise-linear and exponential models were more accurate for a 3-day latency, with findings highlighting significant airborne transmission potential in enclosed spaces.

Article Abstract

African swine fever virus (ASFV) continues to spread across the world, and currently, there are no treatments or vaccines available to combat this virus. Reliable estimates of transmission parameters for ASFV are therefore needed to establish effective contingency plans. This study used data from controlled ASFV inoculations of pigs to assess the transmission parameters. Three models were developed with (binary, piecewise-linear and exponential) time-dependent levels of infectiousness based on latency periods of 3-5 days derived from the analysis of 294 ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid-stabilized blood samples originating from 16 pigs with direct and 10 pigs with indirect contact to 8 inoculated pigs. The models were evaluated for three different discrete latency periods of infection. The likelihood ratio test showed that a binary model had an equally good fit for a latency period of 4 or 5 days as the piecewise-linear and exponential model. However, for a latency period of 3 days, the piecewise-linear and exponential models had the best fit. The modelling was done in discrete time as testing was conducted on specific days. The main contribution of this study is the estimation of ASFV genotype II transmission through the air in a confined space. The estimated transmission parameters via air are not much lower than for direct contact between pigs. The estimated parameters should be useful for future simulations of control measures against ASFV.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10098825PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/tbed.14757DOI Listing

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