Foot-and-mouth disease virus: Immunobiology advances in vaccines and vaccination strategies addressing vaccine failures—An Indian perspective
© 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. A mass vaccination campaign in India seeks to control and eventually eradicate foot-and-mouth disease (FMD). Biosanitary measures along with FMD monitoring are being conducted along with vaccination. The implementation of the FMD control prog...
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th-mahidol.510252020-01-27T16:33:10Z Foot-and-mouth disease virus: Immunobiology advances in vaccines and vaccination strategies addressing vaccine failures—An Indian perspective Raj Kumar Singh Gaurav Kumar Sharma Sonalika Mahajan Kuldeep Dhama Suresh H. Basagoudanavar Madhusudan Hosamani B. P. Sreenivasa Wanpen Chaicumpa Vivek Kumar Gupta Aniket Sanyal Indian Council of Agricultural Research Faculty of Medicine, Siriraj Hospital, Mahidol University Indian Veterinary Research Institute Immunology and Microbiology Medicine © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. A mass vaccination campaign in India seeks to control and eventually eradicate foot-and-mouth disease (FMD). Biosanitary measures along with FMD monitoring are being conducted along with vaccination. The implementation of the FMD control program has drastically reduced the incidence of FMD. However, cases are still reported, even in regions where vaccination is carried out regularly. Control of FMD outbreaks is difficult when the virus remains in circulation in the vaccinated population. Various FMD risk factors have been identified that are responsible for FMD in vaccinated areas. The factors are discussed along with strategies to address these challenges. The current chemically inactivated trivalent vaccine formulation containing strains of serotype O, A, and Asia 1 has limitations including thermolability and induction of only short-term immunity. Advantages and disadvantages of several new-generation alternate vaccine formulations are discussed. It is unfeasible to study every incidence of FMD in vaccinated animals/areas in such a big country as India with its huge livestock population. However, at the same time, it is absolutely necessary to identify the precise reason for vaccination failure. Failure to vaccinate is one reason for the occurrence of FMD in vaccinated areas. FMD epidemiology, emerging and re-emerging virus strains, and serological status over the past 10 years are discussed to understand the impact of vaccination and incidences of vaccination failure in India. Other factors that are important in vaccination failure that we discuss include disrupted herd immunity, health status of animals, FMD carrier status, and FMD prevalence in other species. Recommendations to boost the search of alternate vaccine formulation, strengthen the veterinary infrastructure, bolster the real-time monitoring of FMD, as well as a detailed investigation and documentation of every case of vaccination failure are provided with the goal of refining the control program. 2020-01-27T08:54:29Z 2020-01-27T08:54:29Z 2019-09-01 Review Vaccines. Vol.7, No.3 (2019) 10.3390/vaccines7030090 2076393X 2-s2.0-85073294772 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/51025 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85073294772&origin=inward |
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Immunology and Microbiology Medicine Raj Kumar Singh Gaurav Kumar Sharma Sonalika Mahajan Kuldeep Dhama Suresh H. Basagoudanavar Madhusudan Hosamani B. P. Sreenivasa Wanpen Chaicumpa Vivek Kumar Gupta Aniket Sanyal Foot-and-mouth disease virus: Immunobiology advances in vaccines and vaccination strategies addressing vaccine failures—An Indian perspective |
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© 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. A mass vaccination campaign in India seeks to control and eventually eradicate foot-and-mouth disease (FMD). Biosanitary measures along with FMD monitoring are being conducted along with vaccination. The implementation of the FMD control program has drastically reduced the incidence of FMD. However, cases are still reported, even in regions where vaccination is carried out regularly. Control of FMD outbreaks is difficult when the virus remains in circulation in the vaccinated population. Various FMD risk factors have been identified that are responsible for FMD in vaccinated areas. The factors are discussed along with strategies to address these challenges. The current chemically inactivated trivalent vaccine formulation containing strains of serotype O, A, and Asia 1 has limitations including thermolability and induction of only short-term immunity. Advantages and disadvantages of several new-generation alternate vaccine formulations are discussed. It is unfeasible to study every incidence of FMD in vaccinated animals/areas in such a big country as India with its huge livestock population. However, at the same time, it is absolutely necessary to identify the precise reason for vaccination failure. Failure to vaccinate is one reason for the occurrence of FMD in vaccinated areas. FMD epidemiology, emerging and re-emerging virus strains, and serological status over the past 10 years are discussed to understand the impact of vaccination and incidences of vaccination failure in India. Other factors that are important in vaccination failure that we discuss include disrupted herd immunity, health status of animals, FMD carrier status, and FMD prevalence in other species. Recommendations to boost the search of alternate vaccine formulation, strengthen the veterinary infrastructure, bolster the real-time monitoring of FMD, as well as a detailed investigation and documentation of every case of vaccination failure are provided with the goal of refining the control program. |
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Indian Council of Agricultural Research |
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Indian Council of Agricultural Research Raj Kumar Singh Gaurav Kumar Sharma Sonalika Mahajan Kuldeep Dhama Suresh H. Basagoudanavar Madhusudan Hosamani B. P. Sreenivasa Wanpen Chaicumpa Vivek Kumar Gupta Aniket Sanyal |
format |
Review |
author |
Raj Kumar Singh Gaurav Kumar Sharma Sonalika Mahajan Kuldeep Dhama Suresh H. Basagoudanavar Madhusudan Hosamani B. P. Sreenivasa Wanpen Chaicumpa Vivek Kumar Gupta Aniket Sanyal |
author_sort |
Raj Kumar Singh |
title |
Foot-and-mouth disease virus: Immunobiology advances in vaccines and vaccination strategies addressing vaccine failures—An Indian perspective |
title_short |
Foot-and-mouth disease virus: Immunobiology advances in vaccines and vaccination strategies addressing vaccine failures—An Indian perspective |
title_full |
Foot-and-mouth disease virus: Immunobiology advances in vaccines and vaccination strategies addressing vaccine failures—An Indian perspective |
title_fullStr |
Foot-and-mouth disease virus: Immunobiology advances in vaccines and vaccination strategies addressing vaccine failures—An Indian perspective |
title_full_unstemmed |
Foot-and-mouth disease virus: Immunobiology advances in vaccines and vaccination strategies addressing vaccine failures—An Indian perspective |
title_sort |
foot-and-mouth disease virus: immunobiology advances in vaccines and vaccination strategies addressing vaccine failures—an indian perspective |
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2020 |
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https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/51025 |
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1763489903643983872 |