BMC Veterinary Research (Jun 2017)

Potential for rapid antibody detection to identify tuberculous cattle with non-reactive tuberculin skin test results

  • W. Ray Waters,
  • H. Martin Vordermeier,
  • Shelley Rhodes,
  • Bhagwati Khatri,
  • Mitchell V. Palmer,
  • Mayara F. Maggioli,
  • Tyler C. Thacker,
  • Jeffrey T. Nelson,
  • Bruce V. Thomsen,
  • Suelee Robbe-Austerman,
  • Doris M. Bravo Garcia,
  • Mark A. Schoenbaum,
  • Mark S. Camacho,
  • Jean S. Ray,
  • Javan Esfandiari,
  • Paul Lambotte,
  • Rena Greenwald,
  • Adrian Grandison,
  • Alina Sikar-Gang,
  • Konstantin P. Lyashchenko

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12917-017-1085-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background Bovine tuberculosis (TB) control programs generally rely on the tuberculin skin test (TST) for ante-mortem detection of Mycobacterium bovis-infected cattle. Results Present findings demonstrate that a rapid antibody test based on Dual-Path Platform (DPP®) technology, when applied 1-3 weeks after TST, detected 9 of 11 and 34 of 52 TST non-reactive yet M. bovis-infected cattle from the US and GB, respectively. The specificity of the assay ranged from 98.9% (n = 92, US) to 96.0% (n = 50, GB) with samples from TB-free herds. Multi-antigen print immunoassay (MAPIA) revealed the presence of antibodies to multiple antigens of M. bovis in sera from TST non-reactors diagnosed with TB. Conclusions Thus, use of serologic assays in series with TST can identify a significant number of TST non-reactive tuberculous cattle for more efficient removal from TB-affected herds.

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