Infection dynamics and incidence of wild-type porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus in growing pig herds in the U.S. Midwest

Jose Angulo, My Yang, Albert Rovira, Peter R Davies, Montserrat Torremorell

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (PRRSV) infections greatly impact the health and productivity of growing pigs. The introduction and persistence of wild-type PRRSV (WT-PRRSV) strains in growing pig populations is poorly understood. In an observational prospective cohort study, we monitored and surveyed 63 wean-to-finish (WTF) herds across 10 companies located in medium to high pig dense areas in the U.S. Midwest. All herds received weaned pigs from PRRSV-negative or positive-stable breeding herds. Herds were monitored monthly using oral fluids collected following a fixed spatial sampling regime and samples were tested by PRRSV ELISA, RT-PCR and ORF5 sequencing. In most (90%) of the herds, pigs were vaccinated with PRRSV modified-live vaccines either at processing, weaning or shortly after weaning. Wild type PRRSV (WT-PRRSV) infections were defined by the criterion of having more than 2% nucleotide differences in the ORF-5 region compared with reference vaccine strain sequences. Wild type PRRSV was detected in 42% of the herds with infections being more prevalent in the mid to late growing period, with a mean of 20 weeks post placement. Nineteen distinct WT-PRRSV were identified in seven out of 10 production companies with an average of 3 distinct WT-PRRSV strains per company. Vaccinated WTF herds with and without WT-PRRSV detection were compared to each other showing different PCR and ELISA infection patterns. Close-out mortality in vaccinated herds with WT-PRRSV was numerically higher (6.5%) than mortality in those sites where WT-PRRSV was not detected (5.0%) (p = 0.07). Mortality was also higher (10.5%) when WT-PRRSV was detected earlier at eight weeks post-placement compared to late finishing at 20 and 25 weeks post-placement, 2.9% and 4.5% respectively (p = 0.017). Overall, this study sheds light on WT-PRRSV infection dynamics in vaccinated populations of growing pigs, reinforces the importance of biosecurity practices in this phase of production and calls for better understanding of risk factors associated with PRRSV introductions in growing pig sites.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number105976
JournalPreventive Veterinary Medicine
Volume217
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Authors would like to thank Samantha Jansen for helping in the coordination of the study; Dr. Andreia Arruda, Dr. Carles Vilalta, Dr. Jeff Zimmerman, Aaron Rendahl for their valuable contributions to this study, IDEXX for providing ELISA kits, the University of Minnesota Swine Disease Eradication for providing funding and all the producers and veterinarians who participated in the study.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors

Keywords

  • Biosecurity
  • Diagnostics
  • Growing pigs
  • Infection dynamics
  • PRRS
  • Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus
  • Wild type

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article
  • Observational Study

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