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African swine fever in backyard pigs of Sabah state, East Malaysia, 2021

Choon-Kiat Khoo

2021Tropical biomedicine17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

African swine fever (ASF) is a transboundary haemorrhagic viral disease that affected domestic and wild pigs of all ages. The disease is caused by African swine fever virus (ASFV) and was introduced to China in 2018 before spreading rapidly to neighbouring Asian countries. As such, putting countries free from ASF like Malaysia at risk. ASF is highly lethal with no vaccine or treatment available. In February 2021, we confirmed backyard pigs from various locations in Sabah were infected with ASF using real time polymerase chain reaction (real- time PCR). Further characterization of the Sabah ASFVs indicated that they were of p72 genotype II with intergenic region (IGR) variant II that displayed an addition tandem repeat sequence (TRS) insertion, similar to ASFV from Indonesia, V ietnam and China. These results indicate and support the transboundary expansion of a homogenotypic ASFV (p72 genotype II and IGR variant II) in the Europe and Asia-Pacific, emphasizing the need for a holistic international collaboration in control and preventing further spreading of the current ASF pandemic. Importantly, our results informed the first detection and characterization of ASF, a disease previously not detected in Malaysia. This information is crucial for further mitigation and preventive measures.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyAfrican swine fever virusAfrican swine feverGenotypeChinaVirologyPolymerase chain reactionPandemicVeterinary medicineDiseaseVirusCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)GeneInfectious disease (medical specialty)GeographyGeneticsMedicineArchaeologyPathologyAnimal Disease Management and EpidemiologyT-cell and Retrovirus StudiesVector-Borne Animal Diseases