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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Establishment and Evaluation of a Multicolor Latex Microsphere-Based Lateral Flow Immunoassay for the Simultaneous Detection of Antibodies Against African and Classical Swine Fever Viruses.

Journal:
Transboundary and emerging diseases
Year:
2026
Authors:
Chen, Jie et al.
Affiliation:
College of Veterinary Medicine · China

Abstract

African swine fever (ASF), a highly fatal disease often termed the "number one killer" of pigs, presents clinical symptoms indistinguishable from classical swine fever (CSF), such as fever, diarrhea, and vomiting, complicating on-site differential diagnosis. As both ASF and CSF are notifiable diseases under the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH), rapid and accurate identification is crucial for effective outbreak management. In this study, we developed a multicolor lateral flow immunoassay (LFIA) based on latex microspheres (LMs) for the simultaneous detection of antibodies against ASF virus (ASFV) and CSF virus (CSFV). The assay enables visual differentiation within 15 min, with red indicating ASFV antibodies and blue indicating CSFV antibodies. After optimization, the LFIA demonstrated a sensitivity of 1:256, equivalent to that of a commercial ASFV ELISA kit and four-fold higher than that for CSFV (1:64). The assay exhibited high specificity, showing no cross-reactivity with other common swine pathogens and bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV). When applied to 180 clinical serum samples and compared with commercial ELISA kits, the LFIA achieved Cohen's kappa values of 0.986 for ASFV and 0.918 for CSFV, indicating excellent agreement. Additionally, intra and interbatch evaluations confirmed its robust repeatability. Overall, the multicolor LM-LFIA offers a rapid, sensitive, specific, and cost-effective tool for point-of-care testing (POCT) of ASFV and CSFV antibodies, holding promise for routine field surveillance and disease control.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41550267/