Avian Influenza (AI) or Fowl Plague
is an endemic disease in poultry and
other birds around the world caused
by type A influenza virus. It is a devastating
disease that can cause high
mortality in infected flocks and causes
even more dramatic economic
effect on the trade of poultry products
between countries. Avian
Influenza exists in two forms. The
very virulent, (high path) form that
causes high levels of mortality and
morbidity. High path AI has only
been described for subtypes H5 and
H7. The low path form of the disease
occurs with infections of all subtypes
of AI. Mild respiratory signs, depression
and a reduction in egg production
in commercial layers
characterize infection with the
low path form.
The standard procedure
for eradicating outbreaks
of AI is depopulation of
the birds on the infected
premises followed by a
period of cleaning and
disinfection. Eradication
is time consuming,
expensive to conduct
and usually requires
an indemnification
payment to the
farmer for the
value of the birds.
The experiences of the eradication
efforts in the State of Virginia and
the two outbreaks in Northern Italy
have raised questions about the cost
benefit of depopulation strategies as
the only way of handling large outbreaks
of thousands of birds.
In the United States inactivated oil
emulsion vaccines have been used
occasionally to control small outbreaks
of AI in turkeys along with an
epidemiological monitoring program.
In 2000 and again in 2002 Italy was
granted permission to vaccinate birds
with an inactivated AI vaccine manufactured
using a strain of subtype H7.
Merial has a strong tradition
with the manufacture of inactivated
vaccine and is the only
manufacturer of a vector vaccine
for AI.
The Merial facilities in
France and Italy can
produce inactivated AI
vaccines. The vector vaccine
is produced in the
USA.
Vaccines containing subtypes
H7N3 and H7N1
have been produced to control outbreaks in Northern Italy
and Pakistan. Emergency vaccines
containing other local AI isolates can
be requested.
Merial was the first company to
develop a vector live vaccine for AI
using a fowl pox virus as a
vector and expressing the hemagglutinin
gene from a subtype H5 virus.
The TROVAC AI H5 vaccine was
licensed by the USDA in 1998
and is being used to control the
spread of high path AI H5 in
Mexico. More than 750
million doses have been sold
in the countries of Mexico,
El Salvador and Guatemala.
TROVAC AI H5 is intended
for use in one-day-old chicks
or older birds that have not
received a primary inoculation with a
live pox vaccine. Development continues
for similar vaccines containing
subtypes H7 and H9.
|