4.7 Article

The value of the biomarkers cathelicidin, milk amyloid A, and haptoglobin to diagnose and classify clinical and subclinical mastitis

Journal

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
Volume 104, Issue 2, Pages 2106-2122

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2020-18539

Keywords

milk amyloid A; cathelicidin; haptoglobin; mastitis diagnostic

Funding

  1. Tiergyn Berlin e.V. (Berlin, Germany)

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The timely and objective diagnosis and classification of mastitis is crucial, and analyzing specific biomarkers in milk can be advantageous in comparison to other criteria. The study aimed to investigate the diagnostic value of 3 biomarkers in detecting subclinical and clinical mastitis, showing the potential for reliable detection using cathelicidin, milk amyloid A, and haptoglobin measurements in milk.
Timely and objective diagnosis and classification of mastitis is crucial to ensure adequate management and therapeutic decisions. Analyzing specific biomarkers in milk could be advantageous compared with subjective or semiquantitative criteria, such as palpation of the udder in clinical mastitis cases or evaluation of somatic cell count using cow side tests (e.g., California Mastitis Test) in subclinical mastitis quarters. The objective of this study was to investigate the diagnostic value of 3 biomarkers; cathelicidin, milk amyloid A, and haptoglobin for the diagnosis of subclinical and clinical mastitis. Furthermore, the suitability of these biomarkers to differentiate between mild, moderate, and severe clinical mastitis and the influence of different pathogens on biomarker levels was tested. A total of 67 healthy cows, 119 cows with subclinical mastitis, and 212 cows with clinical mastitis were enrolled in the study. Although cathelicidin, haptoglobin, and milk amyloid A were measured in all samples from healthy cows and those with subclinical mastitis, haptoglobin, and cathelicidin results were only available from 121 out of 212 cows with clinical mastitis. Milk amyloid A was measured in all samples. In cows with clinical mastitis, the mastitic quarter and a second healthy quarter serving as a healthy in-cow control quarter were sampled. It was possible to differentiate between healthy quarters, quarters with subclinical mastitis, and quarters with clinical mastitis using all 3 biomarkers. Concerning cathelicidin, thresholds were 0.000 [sensitivity (Se) = 0.83, specificity (Sp) = 0.97] and 0.053 (Se = 0.98, Sp = 0.99) for normalized optical density at 450 nm (NOD450) for differentiating between healthy quarters and quarters with subclinical or clinical mastitis, respectively. Thresholds of 1.28 mu g/mL (Se = 0.65, Sp = 0.76) and 1.81 mu g/mL (Se = 0.77, Sp = 0.83) for milk amyloid A and 3.65 mu g/mL (Se = 0.92, Sp = 0.94) and 5.40 mu g/mL mL (Se = 0.96, Sp = 0.99) for haptoglobin were calculated, respectively. Healthy in-cow control quarters from cows with CM showed elevated milk amyloid A and haptoglobin levels compared with healthy quarters from healthy cows. Only the level of milk amyloid A was higher in severe clinical mastitis cases compared with mild ones. In contrast to clinical mastitis, cathelicidin and haptoglobin in subclinical mastitis quarters were significantly influenced by different bacteriological results. The measurement of cathelicidin, milk amyloid A, and haptoglobin in milk proved to be a reliable method to detect quarters with subclinical or clinical mastitis.

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