Pathogens (Mar 2023)

First Report of Swinepox in a Wild Boar in Italy: Pathologic and Molecular Findings

  • Lisa Guardone,
  • Katia Varello,
  • Valeria Listorti,
  • Simone Peletto,
  • Lara Wolfsgruber,
  • Roberto Zoccola,
  • Vittoria Montemurro,
  • Erika Messana,
  • Elena Bozzetta,
  • Pierluigi Acutis,
  • Loretta Masoero,
  • Elisabetta Razzuoli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens12030472
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. 472

Abstract

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Swinepox virus (SWPV) is responsible for sporadic acute poxvirus infections in swine worldwide, causing a pathognomonic eruptive proliferative dermatitis. Beside direct and congenital transmission, the pig louse Haematopinus suis acts as a mechanical vector and favors virus infection through skin lesions. Infections are generally described in domestic pigs, while only a few cases have been reported in wild boars, in Austria and Germany. In September 2022, SWPV infection was suspected at post-mortem examination of a wild boar piglet with characteristic lesions in Liguria, Northwest Italy. The piglet was heavily parasitized by swine lice (H. suis). SWPV was then confirmed by histological and molecular analyses. Possible viral co-infections were also investigated (African swine fever virus, classical swine fever virus, parvovirus, circovirus, Aujeszky’s disease virus and hepatitis E virus). This article describes gross and histopathologic features of SWPV infection, differential diagnosis, and potential vector-borne transmission to domestic pigs, presenting a brief review of the literature on the topic. SWPV infection is reported in wild boars in Italy for the first time. The finding of SWPV in a wild boar in an area with a very limited pig population may suggest the existence of a “wildlife cycle” in the area. Further investigations are needed to understand the real risk of transmission of SWPV to domestic pigs as well as the role of other arthropod vectors.

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