Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Technological advances in veterinary diagnostics: opportunities to deploy rapid decentralised tests to detect pathogens affecting livestock.
- Journal:
- Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics)
- Year:
- 2017
- Authors:
- Howson, E L A et al.
Plain-English summary
This research discusses the need for better ways to quickly diagnose diseases in farm animals, which is important for producing enough food for the growing human population. Infectious diseases can hurt the productivity of livestock, and the global trade of animals increases the risk of spreading these diseases. Currently, diagnosing these illnesses involves sending samples to a central lab, which can take a long time and delay important decisions. New technologies developed for human medicine are being adapted to create faster tests for livestock diseases, but many of these tests are still in the research phase and not yet available for regular use. The study highlights promising new tests and the challenges that need to be overcome to make them widely available.
Abstract
Sustainable food production capable of feeding a growing human population is a significant global challenge, and is a priority encompassed within the United Nations Millennium Development Goal to 'eradicate extreme poverty and hunger'. Infectious diseases reduce the productivity of farm animals, and the globalised trade of animals and their products increases the threat of disease incursion. Accurate and rapid diagnostic tests are an essential component of contingency plans to detect, control and eradicate such diseases. Diagnosis involves a 'pipeline' that normally starts with clinical suspicion, followed by collecting samples, transporting specimens to a centralised laboratory setting (e.g. national/international Reference Laboratories), analysing these samples using a range of diagnostic tests and reporting the results. However, the transport of specimens from the field to the laboratory can be a lengthy process that can delay critical decision-making and severely affect the quality of the samples. This important limitation of centralised diagnostic testing has motivated the development of tools for the rapid, simple detection of livestock pathogens. Recent advances in the development of technologies for personalised human medicine have motivated the development of prototype diagnostic tests for a wide selection of diseases of livestock. However, many of these tests are not yet routinely used or commercially available. This paper critically reviews the most promising examples of such assays, and highlights the challenges that remain to transition these tests from applied research and development into routine use.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30152469/