4.2 Article

Field Application of qPCR Monitoring of Infectious Laryngotracheitis Virus in Settled Chicken House Dust and Its Role in Control of a Major Outbreak

Journal

AVIAN DISEASES
Volume 66, Issue 3, Pages 299-307

Publisher

AMER ASSOC AVIAN PATHOLOGISTS

Keywords

avian infectious laryngotracheitis; poultry dust; monitoring; qPCR; outbreak; control; sampling

Funding

  1. AgriFutures Australia [PRJ010639]

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Population-level sampling using ILTV in poultry dust can assess ILT vaccination outcomes. The method was applied in meat chicken flocks and showed that ILTV infection is common before vaccination. Collecting dust samples proved useful in interpreting vaccination outcomes and ILTV status.
Population-level sampling based on qPCR detection of infectious laryngotracheitis virus (ILTV) in poultry dust can be used to assess ILT vaccination outcomes following mass administration in drinking water. We report on the field application of this approach to assess the success of vaccine administration and its use in ILT outbreak control in meat chickens. In Study 1, dust samples were collected from 26 meat chicken flocks at 0, 4, 7, 14, and 21 days post drinking water vaccination (DPV) given between 7 to 13 days of age with the Serva or A20 live attenuated ILT vaccines. Unexpectedly, ILTV DNA was detected in dust samples collected prior to vaccination in 22/26 flocks. Typing revealed that the detected ILTV was different from the vaccine virus. To determine whether the detected ILTV DNA was from active infection or carryover of a noninfectious virus, Study 2 was implemented in 14 additional flocks with dust samples collected at 0, 7, 14, and 21 DPV and tracheal swabs collected from 15 birds/flock at 0 and 21 DPV. The results indicated that there was active infection with ILTV in those flocks before vaccination. This approach contributed to a statewide control program resulting in the eradication of ILT from South Australia as confirmed by negative ILTV test results for dust samples from 50 flocks and the absence of clinical ILT. These findings show that ILTV infection prior to vaccination is common in outbreak situations and that dust samples must be collected at 0 and 7 DPV for meaningful interpretation of vaccination outcomes and ILTV status. Comparatively low-cost dust testing during an outbreak, coupled with typing information, greatly assisted with decision making and control strategies during a major outbreak, including confirmation of the absence of infection in the final stages.

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