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Mycoplasmal pneumonia in Swine

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Presentation on theme: "Mycoplasmal pneumonia in Swine"— Presentation transcript:

1 Mycoplasmal pneumonia in Swine
Immunologic Considerations

2 Mycoplasmal pneumonia
Chronic infection of ciliated epithelium Increased cost Interventions, fixed cost Reduce revenue Reduced growth rate (# sold) Cull/substandard pigs (price penalty) Mortality

3 The “customer”

4 What is “success”? Final customer…the pig Welfare & well being
Producer Biology  financial

5 Maes, et al Typical economic impact  ADG,  Cull  Mortality FE
Vaccine, 1999

6 Study designs Random, blinded evaluations
block by source, sex, weight, etc Four weeks from vaccination to challenge Four week monitoring period

7 Immunity Passive Immunity Protects from challenge
May interact with active immunization Active Immunity Level/duration of protection Thacker,et al 2000; BIVI 2000

8 Swine Health & Production
Cellular Immunity Dr. E Thacker Various levels of cellular immune response Sensitized via vaccination All vaccines protected lungs Swine Health & Production

9 CMI Relationship CMI = Cell mediated immunity Peripheral lymphocytes
Association with growth rate? Higher CMI level at challenge Higher ADG

10 Clinical study Higher CMI responses associated with
Higher Average Daily Gain Reduced Lung lesions Replication of results Roof, AASV 2001

11 Combination control Application of vaccines & therapeutics
“Complimentary” strategies? Sources of active immunity Immunization Field organism exposure

12 Natural exposure Slow onset in continuous production systems
Low level introduction/late spread Aerosol spread & dose Alone or complicated disease

13 Linkage Several methods to develop immunity Prior to vaccines…
Strategic medications one week per month Study case

14 Prophylaxis & Metaphylaxis
Established clinical disease “Peri” outbreak Little or no overt clinical disease Exposure has occurred “Incubation” period

15 Metaphylaxis Metaphylaxis: e.g. Strategic-Dosing
natural exposure allows infection and incubation immediately prior to short-term medication to shut down the incubation process prior to expression of disease and associated negative biologic and economic consequences Exposure may aid development of protective long-term active immunity against endemic diseases

16 Metaphylaxis Limited duration of therapeutic medication: Advantages
limits cost organism/antibiotic exposure time development of resistance

17 Potential for Metaphylactic Strategic-Dosing
Inability to exclude infection Disease outbreaks later in production SEW/18-week wall, etc Lawsonia/PPE Vaccines not available or only partially effective APP Streptococcus Compliance failure

18 Potential Change in epidemiology
Timing of vaccination prior to exposure Newly diagnosed disease Multiple disease challenges require broad spectrum intervention tool

19 Case study Commercial 3-site production system in Midwest
Consistent history of decreased performance 8-12 weeks post-placement in finisher (18-22 weeks of age) ADG F/G ADFI Inconsistent diagnostic findings

20 Swine Health & Production, 2000
Design 2 animals per pen were serially bled every two weeks Serology was initially performed on placement and closeout samples to screen for M. hyo, PRRS, SIV, TGE, Salmonella and Lawsonia activity Additional serology was performed on bi-weekly samples for pathogens shown to be active in finishing based on screening serology Swine Health & Production, 2000

21 Therapeutic options Treatment 1: Denagard +Aureomycin pulsed 5 times (2, 4, 7, 10, and 13 weeks post-placement) and Aureomycin 100g/t given weeks 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 11, and 12 [“Continuous”] Treatment 2: Denagard(35 g/t) + Aureomycin(10 mg/lb BW) pulsed 5 times (2, 4, 7, 10, and 13 weeks post-placement) [“Pulse”] Treatment 3: Non-medicated Controls

22 Outcomes Consistently observed performance  did not occur during any 2-week interval Perhaps because 2/3 of the animals in the barn/airspace were on systemic antibiotics which  infection pressure However both med strategies significantly improved overall survivability and performance

23 Impact on Mycoplasma

24 Immunology Both strategic and continuous medication strategies significantly improved ADFI, ADG, F/G and survivability while being cost-effective There were no significant performance differences between strategic and continuous medication strategies Strategic medication permitted natural Mycoplasma exposure and immune response (seroconversion) as w/ NMC’s while improving/protecting growth performance

25 Implications Therapeutic use of medications or biologics
Goals of model Growth Lungs Defined vs. natural exposure Immunity

26 End consumers The pig Reduced clinical disease
Maintenance of therapeutic application & use Welfare Consumer Reduced medication use Residue, resistance More efficient resource use

27 Summary thoughts Immunologic advantages in Mycoplasma control
Single point application Defined investment Limited residue/resistance Limitations Incomplete control...

28 Combined approaches May enhance control of Mycoplasmal disease
Improved total respiratory health “Enhance” active immunity Limit biologic consequences of exposure


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