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Evaluation of the safety, immunogenicity and efficacy of a new live-attenuated lumpy skin disease vaccine in India.

Authors :
Kumar N
Barua S
Kumar R
Khandelwal N
Kumar A
Verma A
Singh L
Godara B
Chander Y
Kumar G
Riyesh T
Sharma DK
Pathak A
Kumar S
Dedar RK
Mehta V
Gaur M
Bhardwaj B
Vyas V
Chaudhary S
Yadav V
Bhati A
Kaul R
Bashir A
Andrabi A
Yousuf RW
Koul A
Kachhawaha S
Gurav A
Gautam S
Tiwari HA
Munjal VK
Gupta MK
Kumar R
Gulati BR
Misri J
Kumar A
Mohanty AK
Nandi S
Singh KP
Pal Y
Dutt T
Tripathi BN
Source :
Virulence [Virulence] 2023 Dec; Vol. 14 (1), pp. 2190647.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Lumpy skin disease (LSD) was reported for the first time in India in 2019 and since then, it has become endemic. Since a homologous (LSD-virus based) vaccine was not available in the country, goatpox virus (GPV)-based heterologous vaccine was authorized for mass immunization to induce protection against LSD in cattle. This study describes the evaluation of safety, immunogenicity and efficacy of a new live-attenuated LSD vaccine developed by using an Indian field strain, isolated in 2019 from cattle. The virus was attenuated by continuous passage ( P  = 50) in Vero cells. The vaccine (50 <superscript>th</superscript> LSDV passage in Vero cells, named as Lumpi-ProVac <superscript> Ind </superscript> ) did not induce any local or systemic reaction upon its experimental inoculation in calves ( n  = 10). At day 30 post-vaccination (pv), the vaccinated animals were shown to develop antibody- and cell-mediated immune responses and exhibited complete protection upon virulent LSDV challenge. A minimum Neethling response (0.018% animals; 5 out of 26,940 animals) of the vaccine was observed in the field trials conducted in 26,940 animals. There was no significant reduction in the milk yield in lactating animals ( n  = 10108), besides there was no abortion or any other reproductive disorder in the pregnant animals ( n  = 2889). Sero-conversion was observed in 85.18% animals in the field by day 30 pv.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2150-5608
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Virulence
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36919498
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/21505594.2023.2190647