Abstract: First assessment of weeks-to-negative processing fluids in breeding herds after a Senecavirus A outbreak
Senecavirus A (SVA) causes vesicular disease in swine and has been responsible for a rampant increase in the yearly number of foreign animal disease investigations conducted in the United States. Diagnostic investigations for SVA are typically performed by sampling animals individually, which is labor-intensive and stressful. Developing an alternative aggregate sampling method would facilitate the detection of this virus at the population level. In a preliminary study, SVA was detected in processing fluids (PF) collected in a breeding herd before and after outbreak detection. The objective of this study was to estimate the average number of weeks PF remain SVA-positive after an SVA outbreak. Ten farrow-to-wean breeding herds volunteered to participate in this studyby longitudinally collecting PF samples after an SVA outbreak was detected and submitting samples for RT-rtPCR testing. The PF samples from the 10 farms were SVA-positive for an average of 11.8 weeks after the outbreak. Here, we show that testing of PF may be a cost-effective method to detect SVA and help halt its spread in SVA-endemic regions.
Preis G, Benjamin NR, Murray D, et al. First assessment of weeks-to-negative processing fluids in breeding herds after a Senecavirus A outbreak. Porcine Health Manag. 2024;10(1):2. Published 2024 Jan 5. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40813-023-00353-7