| Literature DB >> 31766581 |
Laura Zani1, Klaas Dietze1, Zlatina Dimova2, Jan Hendrik Forth1, Daniel Denev3, Klaus Depner1, Tsviatko Alexandrov3.
Abstract
African swine fever (ASF) is one of the most threatening diseases for the pig farming sector worldwide. As an effective vaccine is lacking, strict application of control measures is the only way to fight the disease in both industrial farms and backyard holdings. With generally low biosecurity standards, the latter are at particular risk for disease introduction and offer challenging conditions for disease control. In the following case report, we describe the overall course of an ASF outbreak in a Bulgarian backyard farm and the implemented control measures. Farm facilities and available data have been investigated to estimate the possible source, spread and time point of virus introduction. Contact with contaminated fomites entering the stable via human activities was regarded to be the most likely introduction route. The slow disease spread within the farm contributes to the hypothesis of a moderate contagiosity. As no further ASF outbreaks have been detected in domestic pig farms in the region, it could be demonstrated that successful disease control in small-scale farms can be reached. Thus, the report contributes to a better understanding of ASF in the backyard sector.Entities:
Keywords: ASFV whole-genome sequencing; African swine fever; backyard sector; case report
Year: 2019 PMID: 31766581 PMCID: PMC6958451 DOI: 10.3390/vetsci6040094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Sci ISSN: 2306-7381
Figure 1Map of reported ASF outbreaks in Bulgaria and bordering areas (1 January 2018–1 March 2019). The red dot marks the location of the described Bulgarian backyard farm. Blue dots indicate Bulgarian wild boar cases. ASF cases in bordering countries are colored in grey. Protection and surveillance zones are mapped according the COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING DECISION (EU) 2018/1280. P. Wysocki, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut, Source: ADNS.
Figure 2Potential spreading scenario.
Figure 3Timeline of the outbreak and estimated high-risk period.
Overview of pigs in the affected farm including test results.
| Animal ID | Date of Death | qPCR | Antibody Detection | Virus Isolation | Tested Specimen |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Aug 16 | positive | n/a | n/a | tissue sample |
|
| Aug 27 | positive | n/a | n/a | tissue sample |
|
| Aug 28 | positive | n/a | n/a | tissue sample |
|
| Aug 29 | positive | positive | positive | spleen, kidney, lymph node |
|
| Aug 31 (culled) | positive | weakly positive | positive | blood |
|
| Aug 31 (culled) | positive | negative | positive | blood |
|
| Aug 31 (culled) | negative | negative | n/a | blood |
Hypothetical introduction routes and their estimated probability.
| Hypothetical Introduction Route | Risk Factors | Description | Probability of Introduction Pathway |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Contact to contaminated fomites/food | Feeding regime | According to the farmer, no swill was fed to the pigs. No ASF has been detected in other pig farms of the village having the same food supply. | Moderate |
| Anthropogenic factor | Access to stable not restricted for anyone who had access to the farmers yard. In case of the farmer’s absence, colleagues were taking care of the animals. | High | |
| 2. Link to infected wild boar | Setup of the farm | The animal facilities are located inside the garden surrounding the farmer’s house. The area is enclosed by a stonewalled fence. No evidence for direct contact with wild boar within the farm. | Negligible |
| Indirect contact with wild boar environment | The first ASF case in wild boar within the region has been detected 5 months after the described outbreak. Still it cannot be excluded that the disease has been present in the population before then. | Moderate | |
| Anthropogenic factor | The owner has a hunting license but did not go hunting in the last 15 years. | Low | |
| 3. Animal movement | Introduction of infected animals | All pigs have been purchased in 2017. | Negligible |
| Animal movement | The last movement of the boar for breeding purposes was three months before the outbreak. | Negligible |