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Quantifying the effect of swab pool size on the detection of influenza A viruses in broiler chickens and its implications for surveillance
- Source :
- BMC Veterinary Research, Vol 14, Iss 1, Pp 1-9 (2018), BMC Veterinary Research
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2018.
-
Abstract
- Background Timely diagnosis of influenza A virus infections is critical for outbreak control. Due to their rapidity and other logistical advantages, lateral flow immunoassays can support influenza A virus surveillance programs and here, their field performance was proactively assessed. The performance of real-time polymerase chain reaction and two lateral flow immunoassay kits (FluDETECT and VetScan) in detecting low pathogenicity influenza A virus in oropharyngeal swab samples from experimentally inoculated broiler chickens was evaluated and at a flock-level, different testing scenarios were analyzed. Results For real-time polymerase chain reaction positive individual-swabs, FluDETECT respectively detected 37% and 58% for the H5 and H7 LPAIV compared to 28% and 42% for VetScan. The mean virus titer in H7 samples was higher than for H5 samples. For real-time polymerase chain reaction positive pooled swabs (containing one positive), detections by FluDETECT were significantly higher in the combined 5- and 6-swab samples compared to 11-swab samples. FluDETECT detected 58%, 55.1% and 44.9% for the H7 subtype and 28.3%, 34.0% and 24.6% for the H5 in pools of 5, 6 and 11 respectively. In our testing scenario analysis, at low flock-level LPAIV infection prevalence, testing pools of 11 detected slightly more infections while at higher prevalence, testing pools of 5 or 6 performed better. For highly pathogenic avian influenza virus, testing pools of 11 (versus 5 or 6) detected up to 5% more infections under the assumption of similar sensitivity across pools and detected less by 3% when its sensitivity was assumed to be lower. Conclusions Much as pooling a bigger number of swab samples increases the chances of having a positive swab included in the sample to be tested, this study’s outcomes indicate that this practice may actually reduce the chances of detecting the virus since it may result into lowering the virus titer of the pooled sample. Further analysis on whether having more than one positive swab in a pooled sample would result in increased sensitivity for low pathogenicity avian influenza virus is needed.
- Subjects :
- Antigen detection
0301 basic medicine
Veterinary medicine
040301 veterinary sciences
Oropharynx
Biology
medicine.disease_cause
Real-time polymerase chain reaction
Virus
Specimen Handling
law.invention
0403 veterinary science
03 medical and health sciences
law
medicine
Influenza A virus
Animals
Lateral flow immunoassays
Sample pooling
Polymerase chain reaction
Immunoassay
Surveillance
lcsh:Veterinary medicine
General Veterinary
medicine.diagnostic_test
Outbreak
04 agricultural and veterinary sciences
General Medicine
Influenza A virus subtype H5N1
Titer
030104 developmental biology
Influenza in Birds
lcsh:SF600-1100
Chickens
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 17466148
- Volume :
- 14
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- BMC Veterinary Research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7267d091c642c446ac71a84888cd35aa
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1186/s12917-018-1602-1