Detection of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) virus in healthy cattle and
buffalo at Southeast Asian slaughterhouses
Abstract
Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) is widespread throughout much of the
world, including parts of South East Asia. As part of the World
Organisation for Animal Health (OIE)’s South East Asia and China
Foot‐and‐Mouth Disease Project (SEACFMD), field sampling was performed
to help understand evidence of widespread virus exposure observed
previously. Serum and dry mucosal swabs were collected to evaluate the
presence of FMDV RNA on the nasal, oral, and dorsal nasopharyngeal
mucosal surfaces of 262 healthy cattle (n=38 in Laos; n=47 in Myanmar)
and buffalo (n=12 in Laos; n=2 in Myanmar) immediately following
slaughter in three slaughterhouses. Swabs and serum were tested by the
OIE FMD world reference laboratory using pan‐serotypic real‐time reverse
transcription‐PCR (RT‐PCR) and serum was evaluated using the FMD
PrioCHECK non-structural protein (NSP) ELISA. In total, 7.3% of animals
had detectable FMDV RNA in one or more of the three sites including
5.3% of nasopharyngeal swabs, 2.3% of oral swabs, and 1.5% of nasal
swabs. In all animals, serum was found not to contain detectable FMDV
RNA, and 37.8% of animals were positive for NSP antibodies, indicating
likely past exposure to FMDV. Results were comparable for Laos and
Myanmar, and were similar for both cattle and buffalo. The current study
demonstrates the utility of detection by swabbing the nasopharynx in the
post-mortem context, in situations such as post-mortem where probang
samples are not feasible. Additionally, FMDV present on the oral and
nasal mucosa of clinically-healthy large ruminants in Laos and Myanmar,
if viable, may potentially play a role in the epidemiology of FMD in
these countries, and perhaps more widely within Southeast Asia.