For years, researchers have been working to develop a safe, effective, and commercially available vaccine for African swine fever as it continues to spread in Russia and most of Europe and Asia, including China. Millions of pigs have been depopulated around the globe because of this highly contagious, deadly disease that affects both domestic and feral pigs and has no cure. But there is some hope.
Recently, the agriculture secretary of the Philippines, William Dar, said the first trials of an ASF vaccine candidate were being conducted on 10 farms. Vietnam’s deputy minister of agriculture and rural development, Phung Duc Tien, said Vietnam plans to produce and commercialize an ASF vaccine in the third quarter of this year.
In addition, an ASF vaccine candidate developed by researchers at the Harbin Veterinary Research Institute at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences have reportedly seen promising results in clinical trials conducted on 3,000 pigs.
The successful development of safe and effective modified live vaccines represents a new frontier in protecting swine from African swine fever.
More than 35 countries are now impacted by the disease, including the Dominican Republic and Haiti, which reported their first confirmed ASF cases in 2021. In China, outbreaks since August 2018 have killed millions of pigs, with estimates from the American Society for Microbiology suggesting the losses were as high as 225 million pigs.
The successful development of safe and effective live attenuated vaccines represents a new frontier in protecting swine from ASF.
“Developing a live attenuated virus vaccine is a complex process depending on a variety of factors, and it could take several years to develop and license a vaccine for ASF,” said Christina Lood, senior director of sustainability and innovation communications at Zoetis.
Scientists at the University of Connecticut and the U.S. Department of Agriculture have developed a new ASF live attenuated vaccine. This candidate was licensed for commercial development by Zoetis in September 2019.
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