In this study, we investigated FMD Asia-1 vaccine effectiveness for both the TUR 11 and Shamir vaccine through retrospective outbreak investigations. Four retrospective outbreak investigations were conducted between September 2011 and July 2012. The investigations examined cattle in village small holdings. Suitable village outbreaks were identified from central records with the assistance of local veterinary services. Villages eligible for the study fulfilled the following criteria: – A recent FMD Asia-1 outbreak had been reported. The outbreaks investigated were the only ones found at the
time that fitted the criteria. Investigated villages also complied with the following: Nutlin-3 datasheet – They had no history of prior exposure to FMD Asia-1. Details of the four investigations are presented in Table 1 and Fig. 1. Each investigation lasted for approximately eight days. Each village was visited by the investigation team (Knight-Jones and Bulut plus an assistant). Details of livestock management, vaccination this website and FMD history were gathered for the village. Then, households with known FMD virus exposure were sampled, i.e. those with cases
or known contact with cases. If there was insufficient time to include all eligible households, equal proportions of households were selected from different geographic sections of the village. Within households, FMD vaccination and clinical history were collected for each animal. Animals were blood sampled and received
an oral examination examining the hard palate, gums, lips and tongue (extruded) except when impossible or unsafe. Oral vesicles and blisters typically appear about four days after infection. They typically heal within 10 days, leaving a scar that becomes less visible over time, although foci lacking lingual papillae may be visible for weeks [7]. As appearance of clinical signs is strongly correlated with shedding and transmission, this secondly is a relevant outcome for assessing vaccine protection. Full details of data collected are provided in table S1 (supplementary material). All analysis was done at the individual animal level unless stated otherwise. An animal was considered affected by FMD if detected on examination or seen by the farmer. All farmers were familiar with FMD. Vaccination status refers to whether an animal was vaccinated at the previous round of mass vaccination (done within the last six months). In the TUR 11 investigations, aside from the single round of vaccination with the trivalent A, O, Asia-1 TUR 11 vaccine, earlier FMD vaccination only included A and O strains.