Article Newcastle Disease

A proven reference for the reduction of Newcastle disease

Mustafa-Seckin Sandikli   |   28 September 2021
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Commercial poultry production is facing many health challenges, including respiratory ones. As a consequence, mitigation or reduction of virus circulation in between houses or farms is of paramount importance to keep the respiratory tract healthy and be able to reach one’s production targets. Besides biosecurity, there is a need to get access to vaccines with the best features in terms of protection, but also prevention against the uncontrolled circulation of avian paramyxovirus type 1, also known as Newcastle disease virus (ND virus) in its pathogenic (‘velogenic’) form.

Vectormune® ND is an innovative vector vaccine that elicits an early, broad, and long-lasting immunity; vaccinated chickens shed significantly less virus than unvaccinated ones.

A recent publication[1] about Vectormune® ND provided the additional asset of significantly reducing the likelihood of virus transmission among birds. Indeed, a velogenic ND virus was provided with a reproduction ratio (R0) figure of 3.20; it basically means that 10 infected chickens are able to transmit the disease to 32 new birds, hence explaining the spreading capacity of this disease to neighboring houses; the outcome will be increased losses, including high mortality rate in case of velogenic strains. On the contrary, in Vectormune® ND-vaccinated broilers, this R0 dropped to 0.82, which means that vaccinated flocks will significantly reduce and slow down the spreading of the virus. In addition, they will survive thanks to strong protection.

This publication helps us to understand that Vectormune® ND controls and prevents Newcastle Disease outbreaks despite a different genotype between challenge strain and vaccine insert.

1Tatár-Kis T, Fischer EAJ, Cazaban C, Walkó-Kovács E, Homonnay ZG, Velkers FC, Palya V, Stegeman JA. A Herpesvirus of Turkey-Based Vector Vaccine Reduces Transmission of Newcastle Disease Virus in Commercial Broiler Chickens with Maternally Derived Antibodies. Vaccines (Basel). 2020 Oct 16;8(4):614. doi: 10.3390/vaccines8040614. PMID: 33081359; PMCID: PMC7720113.

Figure 1. Kinetics of velogenic NDV shedding in vaccinated and unvaccinated birds after direct infection (seeder subgroups) or contact infection (contact subgroups). Seeder subgroups were challenged with 5.0 log10ELD50 of velogenic NDV intra-nasally. Contacts were co-mingled with seeders from 8 hours post-challenge. Oro-nasal swabs and cloacal swabs were collected daily for 14 days post-challenge; vNDV amount was quantified by RT-qPCR. Individual results and mean & STD of Ct values are shown.

In conclusion, Vectormune® ND is a strong tool to break the uncontrolled transmission of NDV among chickens in a house, in between houses in a farm, and ultimately among farms in a high densely populated poultry area. Hence, Vectormune® ND helps to prevent and control Newcastle Disease outbreaks in the poultry industry and protects the performance. In this way, Ceva Animal Health provides one more piece of evidence towards supporting its customers to achieve their targets all around the world.

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A Technical & Economical Guide To Vaccinating Against ND

Read our Technical & Economical Guide to gain insight into the benefits of using Vectormune ND, along with a proper vaccination programme, to protect profitability.

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