Animals (Apr 2022)

Dynamic of Hepatitis E Virus (HEV) Shedding in Pigs

  • Giovanni Ianiro,
  • Marina Monini,
  • Luca De Sabato,
  • Eleonora Chelli,
  • Natalino Cerini,
  • Fabio Ostanello,
  • Ilaria Di Bartolo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12091063
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. 1063

Abstract

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Genotype 3 of hepatitis E virus (HEV-3) is the most common in Europe in both humans and pigs. HEV-3 strains are zoonotic, and foodborne cases associated with consumption of raw and undercooked pork products, mainly liver sausages, have been described. HEV-3 circulates largely in European pig farms, maybe due to its long persistence in the environment. Animals get infected around 3–4 months of age; shortly after, the infection starts to decline up to the age of slaughtering (8–9 months of age in Italy). With the purpose to understand the duration in farmed pigs of the shedding of the virus and its quantity, HEV-RNA detection was performed by Real-time RT-PCR from feces collected individually from two groups of 23 pigs. Sampling was conducted for 4 months shortly before slaughtering age. At 4-months-old, all animals were shedding HEV-3 to high load around 105 genome copies per gram (GC/g). Prevalence was higher in growers than in fatteners, with most of the pigs still positive around 166 days of age. Beyond some difference among individual pigs, the amount of HEV in feces decreased with the age of animals. The longest fattening period should ensure a lower risk of HEV shedder animals at slaughter, reducing the risk of food contamination.

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