4.7 Article

Development of a Novel Canine Parvovirus Vaccine Capable of Stimulating Protective Immunity in Four-Week-Old Puppies in the Face of High Levels of Maternal Antibodies

Journal

VACCINES
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/vaccines11091499

Keywords

canine parvovirus; maternal immunity; vaccination; vaccine efficacy; puppies

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A novel recombinant canine parvovirus type 2c vaccine strain has been developed to overcome maternal antibody interference and provide effective immunity against the virus in young puppies. The vaccine, combined with a distemper virus vaccine, has proven to be safe and successful in inducing sterilising immunity in naive animals.
Many highly effective vaccines have been developed to protect dogs against disease caused by canine parvovirus, but despite this vaccine interference by maternally derived antibodies continues to cause immunisation failure. To help overcome this limitation we have developed a novel, recombinant canine parvovirus type 2c vaccine strain, based on the structural and non-structural elements of an established type 2 vaccine. This novel CPV-2c vaccine strain has unique efficacy in the field, it is able to induce sterilising immunity in naive animals 3 days after vaccination and is able to overcome very high levels of maternally derived antibodies from 4 weeks of age-thus closing the immunity gap to canine parvovirus infection in young puppies. The vaccine strain, named 630a, has been combined with an established canine distemper virus Onderstepoort vaccine strain to produce a new bivalent vaccine (Nobivac DP PLUS), intended to immunise very young puppies in the face of high levels of maternally derived antibody. Here, we describe the onset of immunity and maternal antibody interference studies that support the unique efficacy of the strain, and present overdose studies in both dogs and cats that demonstrate the vaccine to be safe.

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