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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Evaluation of the Efficacy of Low-Concentration Gaseous Chlorine Dioxide in Inactivating Airborne H5 High Pathogenicity Avian Influenza Virus in Vivo Model.

Journal:
Food and environmental virology
Year:
2026
Authors:
Hew, Yik Lim et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Disease Control · Japan
Species:
bird

Abstract

H5 high pathogenicity avian influenza virus (HPAIV) continues to spread globally, causing several high pathogenicity avian influenza (HPAI) outbreaks in poultry and significant economic losses. Biosecurity measures that prevent the introduction of HPAIV represent a top priority for controlling HPAI outbreaks on poultry farms. Although these measures are crucial for minimizing HPAI introduction, outbreaks of viral infection on poultry farms persist, underscoring the importance of continuously improving biosecurity protocols. Therefore, safe and effective microbicide disinfectants could play an essential role in reducing viral spread by inactivating viral particles on surfaces and in the air. This study assessed the efficacy of gaseous chlorine dioxide (ClO) against H5 HPAIV under both gaseous ClOinactivation setting and in vivo conditions. In the gaseous ClOinactivation setting, only low virus titers were recovered (<&#x2009;0.5-1.5 logTCID/mL) when H5 HPAIV aerosols were exposed to gaseous ClO(0.05 ppmv, 0.14 mg/m) for 5&#xa0;min, corresponding to an approximately 2.0-3.0 logreduction. Furthermore, in vivo, all chicks exposed to aerosolized H5 HPAIV, which were treated with 0.1 ppmv gaseous ClOsurvived for 14 days post-challenge, demonstrating complete protection against the virus. The minimum effective concentration of gaseous ClOwas 0.01 ppmv for 5&#xa0;min of inactivation in the inactivation setting, and 0.05 ppmv for 5&#xa0;min in vivo, indicating that relatively low concentrations are sufficient for effective viral inactivation. Therefore, gaseous ClOwas effective at inactivating aerosolized H5 HPAIV and has potential for use as a disinfectant to prevent HPAIV introduction into poultry. (245/250) words.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41575624/