1. Cost‐effectiveness of longitudinal surveillance for Piscirickettsia salmonis using qPCR in Atlantic salmon farms ( Salmo salar ) in Chile
- Author
-
Ian A. Gardner, Marina K. V. C. Delphino, Marco Rozas-Serri, Alicia Gallardo, Daniel Jimenez, Andrea Peña, Joaquin Neumann Heise, and Fernando O. Mardones
- Subjects
Piscirickettsia ,0301 basic medicine ,Cost effectiveness ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,Salmo salar ,Early detection ,Aquaculture ,Aquatic Science ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Fish Diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Piscirickettsia salmonis ,Animals ,Chile ,Salmo ,Antibiotic use ,biology ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,Fishery ,030104 developmental biology ,Sample size determination ,Piscirickettsiaceae Infections ,040102 fisheries ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Sample collection ,Piscirickettsiosis - Abstract
Costs of diagnostic testing including sample collection, sampling frequency and sample size are an important consideration in the evaluation of the economic feasibility of alternative surveillance strategies for detection of infectious diseases in aquatic animals. In Chile, Piscirickettsia salmonis is the primary reason for antibiotic treatments in farmed Atlantic salmon. In 2012, a surveillance and control programme for piscirickettsiosis was established with an overall goal of reducing antibiotic use. The present study estimated the cost-effectiveness of different sampling frequencies and sample sizes to achieve at least 95% confidence of early detection of P. salmonis at the netpen and farm levels using a validated qPCR test. We developed a stochastic model that incorporated variability in test accuracy, within-pen prevalence and sampling costs. Our findings indicated that the current piscirickettsiosis surveillance programme based on risk-based sampling of five moribund or dead fish from 2 to 3 netpens is cost-effective and gives a high probability of detection of P. salmonis in Atlantic salmon farms in Chile at both the netpen and farm levels. Results from this study should incentivize salmon farmers to establish cost-effective strategies for early detection of P. salmonis infection and the application of this approach to other highly infectious diseases.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF