The Pirbright Institute, Pirbright, Surrey, UK.
Boyd Orr Centre for Population and Ecosystem Health, Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Transbound Emerg Dis. 2019 May;66(3):1405-1410. doi: 10.1111/tbed.13146. Epub 2019 Feb 27.
Under-reporting of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) masks the true prevalence in parts of the world where the disease is endemic. Laboratory testing for the detection of FMD virus (FMDV) is usually reliant upon the collection of vesicular epithelium and fluid samples that can only be collected from acutely infected animals, and therefore animals with sub-clinical infection may not be identified. Milk is a non-invasive sample type routinely collected from dairy farms that has been utilized for surveillance of a number of other diseases. The aim of this study was to examine the application of milk as an alternative sample type for FMDV detection and typing, and to evaluate milk as a novel approach for targeted surveillance of FMD in East Africa. FMDV RNA was detected in 73/190 (38%) individual milk samples collected from naturally infected cattle in northern Tanzania. Furthermore, typing information by lineage-specific rRT-PCR assays was obtained for 58% of positive samples, and corresponded with the virus types identified during outbreak investigations in the study area. The VP1-coding sequence data obtained from milk samples corresponded with the sequence data generated from paired epithelial samples collected from the same animal. This study demonstrates that milk represents a potentially valuable sample type for FMDV surveillance and might be used to overcome some of the existing biases of traditional surveillance methods. However, it is recommended that care is taken during sample collection and testing to minimize the likelihood of cross-contamination. Such approaches could strengthen FMDV surveillance capabilities in East Africa, both at the individual animal and herd level.
口蹄疫(FMD)漏报现象在该疾病流行地区掩盖了其真实流行情况。用于检测口蹄疫病毒(FMDV)的实验室检测通常依赖于采集水疱上皮和体液样本,而这些样本只能采集自急性感染动物,因此亚临床感染动物可能无法被识别。牛奶是一种从奶牛场常规采集的非侵入性样本类型,已被用于对许多其他疾病进行监测。本研究旨在检验牛奶作为 FMDV 检测和分型替代样本类型的应用,并评估牛奶作为在东非进行 FMD 靶向监测的新方法。从坦桑尼亚北部自然感染牛群中采集的 190 份个体牛奶样本中,有 73 份(38%)检测到了 FMDV RNA。此外,通过针对谱系特异性 rRT-PCR 检测获得了 58%阳性样本的分型信息,与该研究区域暴发调查中确定的病毒类型相对应。从牛奶样本中获得的 VP1 编码序列数据与从同一动物采集的配对上皮样本中生成的序列数据相对应。本研究表明,牛奶是 FMDV 监测的一种有潜力的样本类型,可用于克服传统监测方法的一些固有偏见。然而,建议在采集和检测样本时要格外小心,以尽量减少交叉污染的可能性。这种方法可以增强东非的 FMDV 监测能力,无论是在个体动物还是畜群层面。