Vaccines (Dec 2022)

Efficacy Studies against PCV-2 of a New Trivalent Vaccine including PCV-2a and PCV-2b Genotypes and <i>Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae</i> When Administered at 3 Weeks of Age

  • Patricia Pleguezuelos,
  • Marina Sibila,
  • Carla Ramírez,
  • Rosa López-Jiménez,
  • Diego Pérez,
  • Eva Huerta,
  • Anna Maria Llorens,
  • Mónica Pérez,
  • Florencia Correa-Fiz,
  • José Carlos Mancera Gracia,
  • Lucas P. Taylor,
  • Jennifer Smith,
  • Meggan Bandrick,
  • Stasia Borowski,
  • Gillian Saunders,
  • Joaquim Segalés,
  • Sergio López-Soria,
  • Maria Fort,
  • Mónica Balasch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10122108
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 12
p. 2108

Abstract

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This study aimed to evaluate the efficacy of a new trivalent vaccine containing inactivated Porcine Circovirus 1-2a and 1-2b chimeras and a Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae bacterin administered to pigs around 3 weeks of age. This trivalent vaccine has already been proved as efficacious in a split-dose regimen but has not been tested in a single-dose scenario. For this purpose, a total of four studies including two pre-clinical and two clinical studies were performed. Globally, a significant reduction in PCV-2 viraemia and faecal excretion was detected in vaccinated pigs compared to non-vaccinated animals, as well as lower histopathological lymphoid lesion plus PCV-2 immunohistochemistry scorings, and incidence of PCV-2-subclinical infection. Moreover, in field trial B, a significant increase in body weight and in average daily weight gain were detected in vaccinated animals compared to the non-vaccinated ones. Circulation of PCV-2b in field trial A and PCV-2a plus PCV-2d in field trial B was confirmed by virus sequencing. Hence, the efficacy of this new trivalent vaccine against a natural PCV-2a, PCV-2b or PCV-2d challenge was demonstrated in terms of reduction of histopathological lymphoid lesions and PCV-2 detection in tissues, serum and faeces, as well as improvement of production parameters.

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