Abstract
Abstract
Knowledge about African swine fever virus (ASFV) transmission and its
survival in the environment is mandatory to develop rational control strategies
and combat this serious disease in pigs. In this study, the risk that
environmental contamination poses for infection of naïve pigs was investigated.
Naïve pigs were introduced as sentinels into contaminated pens either on the
same day or up to three days after ASFV-infected pigs were removed. Three
experiments were carried out in which four to six pigs per pen were inoculated
with virulent ASFV isolates OURT88/1 (genotype I), Georgia 2007/1 or
POL/2015/Podlaskie (genotype II), respectively. The majority of the inoculated
pigs developed acute disease but with no evident haemorrhagic lesions or
haemorrhagic diarrhoea and were culled at the predefined humane endpoint. The
levels of ASFV DNA detected in the blood of the infected animals reached
107-9genome copies/ml before euthanasia. Environmental
swabs were taken from different surfaces in the animal rooms, as well as from
faeces and urine, close to the time of introduction of the naïve animals.
Relatively low quantities of virus DNA were detected in the environmental
samples, in the order of 103-7genome copies. Neither
clinical signs nor virus genomes were detected in the blood of any of the
sentinel pigs over a period of two to three weeks after exposure, indicating
that transmission from the ASFV-contaminated environment did not occur.
Interestingly, viral DNA was detected in nasal and oral swabs from some of the
sentinel animals at early days of exposure (ranging between
103.7-5.8genome copies), though none of them developed
ASF. The results indicate a relatively low risk of ASFV transmission from a
contaminated environment in the absence of blood from infected animals.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory