Emerging Infectious Diseases (Feb 2018)

New Parvovirus Associated with Serum Hepatitis in Horses after Inoculation of Common Biological Product

  • Thomas J. Divers,
  • Bud C. Tennant,
  • Arvind Kumar,
  • Sean McDonough,
  • John Cullen,
  • Nishit Bhuva,
  • Komal Jain,
  • Lokendra Singh Chauhan,
  • Troels Kasper Høyer Scheel,
  • W. Ian Lipkin,
  • Melissa Laverack,
  • Sheetal Trivedi,
  • Satyapramod Srinivasa,
  • Laurie Beard,
  • Charles M. Rice,
  • Peter D. Burbelo,
  • Randall W. Renshaw,
  • Edward Dubovi,
  • Amit Kapoor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2402.171031
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 2
pp. 303 – 310

Abstract

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Equine serum hepatitis (i.e., Theiler’s disease) is a serious and often life-threatening disease of unknown etiology that affects horses. A horse in Nebraska, USA, with serum hepatitis died 65 days after treatment with equine-origin tetanus antitoxin. We identified an unknown parvovirus in serum and liver of the dead horse and in the administered antitoxin. The equine parvovirus-hepatitis (EqPV-H) shares <50% protein identity with its phylogenetic relatives of the genus Copiparvovirus. Next, we experimentally infected 2 horses using a tetanus antitoxin contaminated with EqPV-H. Viremia developed, the horses seroconverted, and acute hepatitis developed that was confirmed by clinical, biochemical, and histopathologic testing. We also determined that EqPV-H is an endemic infection because, in a cohort of 100 clinically normal adult horses, 13 were viremic and 15 were seropositive. We identified a new virus associated with equine serum hepatitis and confirmed its pathogenicity and transmissibility through contaminated biological products.

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