Porcine Health Management (Oct 2020)
Production losses five months after outbreak with a recombinant of two PRRSV vaccine strains in 13 Danish sow herds
Abstract
Abstract Background In July 2019, a PRRSV-negative boar station was infected with a recombinant of two PRRSV vaccine strains, which subsequently spread to at least 36 herds that had received semen from the boar station. In the following months, all the infected herds reported reduced productivity. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the impact of the PRRS outbreak. Results Production data were collected from 13 of the herds. The average levels of farrowings/week, liveborns/litter, stillborns/litter, pre-weaning mortality and weaned pigs/litter were compared for the five-month period after infection and the preceding 7 months before infection with the new variant of PRRSV-1. Twelve herds experienced a decrease in farrowings/week (0.1–10.8% fewer farrowings/week), and all herds experienced fewer liveborns (0.8–4.8 fewer liveborns/litter) and more stillborns (0.6–2.6 more stillborns/litter). Pre-weaning mortality nearly doubled in half of the herds. Overall, the 13 herds were missing 2.4–6.5 pigs/litter at weaning during the 5 months after infection compared to the seven preceding months before infection. Conclusion In this study, the impact of this new PRRSV-1 variant on productivity exceeded that typically seen in Danish herds infected with PRRSV-1.
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