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The impact of maternally derived immunity on influenza A virus transmission in neonatal pig populations.

机译:母源性免疫对新生猪群中甲型流感病毒传播的影响。

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The commonality of influenza A virus (IAV) exposure and vaccination on swine farms in the United States ensures that the majority of neonatal pigs will have some degree of maternal immunity to IAV. The influence of maternal immunity on IAV transmission in neonatal pig populations will impact virus prevalence and infection dynamics across pig populations. The main objective of this study was to assess the impact of maternally derived immunity on IAV transmission in an experimental setting. Neonatal pigs suckled colostrum and derived maternal (passive) immunity from sows in one of three treatment groups: (a) non-vaccinated control (CTRL) or vaccinated with (b) homologous (PASSV-HOM) or (c) heterologous (PASSV-HET) inactivated experimental IAV vaccines. Sentinel neonatal pigs derived from the groups above were challenged with IAV via direct contact with an experimentally infected pig (seeder pig) and monitored for IAV infection daily via nasal swab sampling. A susceptible-infectious-recovered (SIR) experimental model was used to obtain and estimate transmission parameters in each treatment group via a generalized linear model. All sentinel pigs in the CTRL (30/30) and PASSV-HET (30/30) groups were infected with IAV following contact with the seeder pigs and the reproduction ratio estimates (95% confidence interval) were 10.4 (6.6-15.8) and 7.1 (4.2-11.3), respectively. In contrast, 1/20 sentinel pigs in the PASSV-HOM group was infected following contact with the seeder pigs and the reproduction ratio estimate was significantly lower compared to the CTRL and PASSV-HET groups at 0.8 (0.1-3.7). Under the conditions of this study, IAV transmission was reduced in neonatal pigs with homologous maternal immunity compared to seronegative neonatal pigs and pigs with heterologous maternal immunity as defined in this study. This study provides estimates for IAV transmission in pigs with differing types of maternal immunity which may describe the influence of maternal immunity on IAV prevalence and infection dynamics in pig populations.Digital Object Identifier http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2012.11.023
机译:在美国养猪场中,甲型流感病毒(IAV)的暴露和疫苗接种的共同性确保了大多数新生猪对IAV具有一定程度的母体免疫力。母体免疫力对新生猪群中IAV传播的影响将影响整个猪群中病毒的流行和感染动态。这项研究的主要目的是评估在实验环境中母源性免疫对IAV传播的影响。新生猪在三个治疗组之一中哺乳初乳并从母猪获得母体(被动)免疫:(a)未接种疫苗的对照(CTRL)或已接种(b)同源(PASSV-HOM)或(c)异源(PASSV- HET)灭活的实验性IAV疫苗。通过与实验感染的猪(播种猪)直接接触,对来自上述各组的前哨新生猪进行IAV攻击,并每天通过鼻拭子采样监测IAV感染。使用易感感染恢复(SIR)实验模型通过广义线性模型获得和估计每个治疗组中的传播参数。在与种猪接触后,CTRL(30/30)和PASSV-HET(30/30)组中的所有前哨猪均感染了IAV,繁殖率估计值(95%置信区间)为10.4(6.6-15.8)和分别为7.1(4.2-11.3)。相反,与种猪接触后,PASSV-HOM组中的1/20前哨猪被感染,与CTRL和PASSV-HET组相比,繁殖率估计值明显较低,为0.8(0.1-3.7)。在这项研究的条件下,与血清阴性的新生猪和具有异源母体免疫力的猪相比,具有同源母体免疫力的新生猪的IAV传播减少。这项研究提供了不同类型母源免疫猪的IAV传播估计值,这可能描述了母源免疫对猪群IAV流行率和感染动态的影响。数字对象标识符http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j。疫苗.2012.11.023

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