Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
The safety and immunogenicity of an in ovo vaccine against Newcastle disease virus differ between two lines of chicken.
- Journal:
- Vaccine
- Year:
- 2007
- Authors:
- Dilaveris, Dimitrios et al.
- Affiliation:
- The Royal Veterinary College · United Kingdom
Abstract
Newcastle disease virus is a major threat to poultry and in ovo vaccines are needed. A live in ovo vaccine for Newcastle disease virus, which was licensed but not marketed, was unsafe. It killed 32% of line 0 chicks and 10% of vaccine Lohmann (VALO) chicks using the maximum recommended dose that infected about 40% of the embryos. VALO's made more antibody than line 0's whether infected in ovo or by contact. The vaccine interrupted the massive development of the air capillaries between injection and hatch 3 days later. Cytokines, delivered as DNA in plasmids, did not function as adjuvants. IFN-gamma prevented infection. IL-4 or IL-18 had little or no effect. Line 0 chicks that had been infected by contact were protected and so the unsafe in ovo vaccination of a minority could protect the majority.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17321645/