A cohort study on Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae colonisation in suckling piglets

Publication date

2014-06-01

Authors

Tobias, T JORCID 0000-0002-0747-9531ISNI 0000000419470010
Klinkenberg, DISNI 000000039518318X
Bouma, AISNI 000000036605790X
van den Broek, JanISNI 0000000392899959
Daemen, InekeISNI 0000000506356486
Wagenaar, Jaap A.ISNI 0000000388430808
Stegeman, J AORCID 0000-0003-4361-3846ISNI 0000000388528223

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Abstract

Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae causes respiratory disease in pigs and despite the use of preventive measures such as vaccination and antimicrobials clinical outbreaks still occur. At weaning often many piglets are not colonised. If differences in prevalence between litters are large and if factors were known that could explain these differences, this may provide an opportunity to raise groups of A. pleuropneumoniae free piglets. To this end, a cohort study was performed on two endemically infected farrow-to-finish farms. Seventy-six of 133 sows were selected using stratified random selection by parity. Farmers complied with a strict hygiene and animal management protocol to prevent transmission between litters. Tonsil brush and serum samples taken three weeks before parturition were tested for antigen with an apxIVA qPCR and antibodies with Apx and Omp ELISAs, respectively. Three days before weaning tonsil brush samples from all piglets (n=871) were collected and tested for antigen. Whereas all sows tested positive both in serology tests as well as qPCR, 0.41 of the litters tested fully negative and 0.73 of all piglets tested negative. The proportion of positively tested piglets in positive litters ranged from 0.08-1.0 (median=0.36). A grouped logistic regression model with a beta binomial distribution of the probability for piglets to become infected was fitted to the data and associations with explanatory variables were explored. To test the possibility that alternatively the clustering was caused by onwards transmission among the piglets, a transmission model was fitted to the data incorporating sow-piglet and piglet-piglet transmission, but this model did not fit better. The results of this study showed that the number of colonised suckling piglets was highly clustered and mainly attributable to the variability of infectiousness of the dam, but no dam related risk factor for colonisation status of litter or piglets within litters could be identified.

Keywords

Actinobacillus Infections, Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae, Animals, Animals, Suckling, Antibodies, Bacterial, Carrier State, Cohort Studies, Female, Parity, Pregnancy, Swine, Swine Diseases, Time Factors, Coronacrisis-Taverne, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Tobias, T J, Klinkenberg, D, Bouma, A, van den Broek, J, Daemen, A J J M, Wagenaar, J A & Stegeman, J A 2014, 'A cohort study on Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae colonisation in suckling piglets', Preventive Veterinary Medicine, vol. 114, no. 3-4, pp. 223-230. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.prevetmed.2014.02.008