The vaccination-challenge trial: the gold standard test to evaluate the protective efficacy of infectious coryza vaccines


Autoria(s): Garcia, A.; Romo, F.; Ortiz, A.M.; Blackall, P.J.
Data(s)

01/04/2008

Resumo

Infectious coryza is an upper respiratory tract disease of chickens with the major impact occurring in multi-age flocks. We investigated the relationship between the level of antibodies, as detected by a haemagglutination-inhibition (HI) assay, in infectious coryza-vaccinated chickens and the protection against challenge in those chickens. In one experiment, chickens given a single dose of either of two infectious coryza vaccines lacked a detectable HI response to vaccination but showed significant levels of protection 11 weeks after vaccination. In contrast, in chickens given two doses of an infectious coryza vaccine and challenged 3 weeks after the second vaccine dose, there was a strong serological response with 36/40 birds having a HI titre of 1/20 or greater. In this trial there was an apparent relationship between titre and subsequent protection, with none of the 32 chickens with a titre of 1/40 or 1/80 showing any clinical signs and only one of the same group yielding the challenge organism on culture. In contrast, three of the four vaccinated chickens with a HI titre less than 1/5 developed the typical clinical signs of coryza and yielded the challenge organism on culture. Overall, our results suggest that HI titres cannot be regarded as a definitive predictor of vaccine efficacy. We suggest that the vaccination-challenge trial is the gold standard for the evaluation of the immune response to infectious coryza vaccines.

Identificador

Garcia, A. and Romo, F. and Ortiz, A.M. and Blackall, P.J. (2008) The vaccination-challenge trial: the gold standard test to evaluate the protective efficacy of infectious coryza vaccines. Avian Pathology, 37 (2). pp. 183-186.

http://era.daf.qld.gov.au/861/

Publicador

Taylor & Francis

Relação

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03079450801929941

http://era.daf.qld.gov.au/861/

Palavras-Chave #Avian #Veterinary bacteriology
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed