A new modified live equine influenza virus vaccine: Phenotypic stability, restricted spread and efficacy against heterologous virus challenge

T. M. Chambers, R. E. Holland, L. R. Tudor, H. G.G. Townsend, A. Cook, J. Bogdan, D. P. Lunn, S. Hussey, P. Whitaker-Dowling, J. S. Youngner, R. W. Sebring, S. J. Penner, G. L. Stiegler

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

52 Scopus citations

Abstract

Flu Avert IN vaccine is a new, live attenuated virus vaccine for equine influenza. We tested this vaccine in vivo to ascertain 1) its safety and stability when subjected to serial horse to horse passage, 2) whether it spread spontaneously from horse to horse and 3) its ability to protect against heterologous equine influenza challenge viruses of epidemiological relevance. For the stability study, the vaccine was administered to 5 ponies. Nasal swabs were collected and pooled fluids administered directly to 4 successive groups of naïve ponies by intranasal inoculation. Viruses isolated from the last group retained the vaccine's full attenuation phenotype, with no reversion to the wild-type virus phenotype or production of clinical influenza disease. The vaccine virus spread spontaneously to only 1 of 13 nonvaccinated horses/ponies when these were comingled with 39 vaccinates in the same field. For the heterologous protection study, a challenge model system was utilised in which vaccinated or naïve control horses and ponies were exposed to the challenge virus by inhalation of virus-containing aerosols. Challenge viruses included influenza A/equine-2/Kentucky/98, a recent representative of the 'American' lineage of equine-2 influenza viruses; and A/equine-2/Saskatoon/90, representative of the 'Eurasian' lineage. Clinical signs among challenged animals were recorded daily using a standardised scoring protocol. With both challenge viruses, control animals reliably contracted clinical signs of influenza, whereas vaccinated animals were reliably protected from clinical disease. These results demonstrate that Flu Avert IN vaccine is safe and phenotypically stable, has low spontaneous transmissibility and is effective in protecting horses against challenge viruses representative of those in circulation worldwide.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)630-636
Number of pages7
JournalEquine Veterinary Journal
Volume33
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2001

Keywords

  • Antigenic drift
  • Backpassage
  • Challenge
  • Cold-adapted
  • Horse
  • Intranasal
  • Modified-live virus

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Equine

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