Herd of cows in a grassy field

Vaccination not only reduces the severity of TB in infected cattle, but reduces its spread in dairy herds by 89%, research finds.

Our study suggests that vaccination not only reduces the progression of the disease, but that if vaccinated animals become infected, they are substantially less infectious to others.

Andrew Conlan

探花直播research, led by the 探花直播 of Cambridge and Penn State 探花直播, improves prospects for the elimination and control of bovine tuberculosis (TB), an infectious disease of cattle that results in large economic costs and health impacts across the world. 听

This is the first study to show that BCG-vaccinated cattle infected with TB are substantially less infectious to other cattle. This remarkable indirect effect of the vaccine beyond its direct protective effect has not been measured before.

探花直播spillover of infection from livestock has been estimated to account for about 10% of human tuberculosis cases. While such zoonotic TB (zTB) infections are most commonly associated with gastro-intestinal infections related to drinking contaminated milk, zTB can also cause chronic lung infections in humans. Lung disease caused by zTB can be indistinguishable from regular tuberculosis, but is more difficult to treat due to natural antibiotic resistance in the cattle bacteria.

TB remains endemic in many countries around the world, including in Europe and the Americas, where its control costs farmers and taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars each year.

探花直播study is .

In the study, carried out in Ethiopia, researchers examined the ability of the vaccine, Bacillus Calmette-Gu茅rin (BCG), to directly protect cattle that receive it, as well as to indirectly protect both vaccinated and unvaccinated cattle by reducing TB transmission. Vaccinated and unvaccinated animals were put into enclosures with naturally infected animals, in a novel crossover design performed over two years.

鈥淥ur study found that BCG vaccination reduces TB transmission in cattle by almost 90%. Vaccinated cows also developed significantly fewer visible signs of TB than unvaccinated ones. This suggests that the vaccination not only reduces the progression of the disease, but that if vaccinated animals become infected, they are substantially less infectious to others,鈥 said Andrew Conlan, Associate Professor of Epidemiology at the 探花直播 of Cambridge鈥檚 Department of Veterinary Medicine and a corresponding author of the study.

Using livestock census and movement data from Ethiopia, the team developed a transmission model to explore the potential for routine vaccination to control bovine tuberculosis.

鈥淩esults of the model suggest that vaccinating calves within the dairy sector of Ethiopia could reduce the reproduction number of the bacterium 鈥 the R0 鈥 to below 1, arresting the projected increase in the burden of disease and putting herds on a pathway towards elimination of TB,鈥 Conlan said.

探花直播team focused their studies in Ethiopia, a country with the largest cattle herd in Africa and a rapidly growing dairy sector that has a growing burden of bovine tuberculosis and no current control program, as a representative of similarly situated transitional economies.

鈥淏ovine tuberculosis is largely uncontrolled in low- and middle-income countries, including Ethiopia,鈥 said Abebe Fromsa, associate professor of agriculture and veterinary medicine at Addis Ababa 探花直播 in Ethiopia and the study鈥檚 co-lead author. 鈥淰accination of cattle has the potential to provide significant benefits in these regions.鈥

鈥淔or over a hundred years, programs to eliminate bovine tuberculosis have relied on intensive testing and slaughtering of infected animals,鈥 said Vivek Kapur, professor of microbiology and infectious diseases and Huck Distinguished Chair in Global Health at Penn State and a corresponding author of the study.

He added: 鈥淭his approach is unimplementable in many parts of the world for economic and social reasons, resulting in considerable animal suffering and economic losses from lost productivity, alongside an increased risk of spillover of infection to humans. By vaccinating cattle, we hope to be able to protect both cattle and humans from the consequences of this devastating disease.鈥

Professor James Wood, Alborada Professor of Equine and Farm Animal Science in the 探花直播 of Cambridge鈥檚 Department of Veterinary Medicine, noted that despite TB being more prevalent in lower-income countries, the United Kingdom, Ireland and New Zealand also experience considerable economic pressures from the disease which continues to persist despite intensive and costly control programs.

Wood said: 鈥淔or over twenty-years the UK government has pinned hopes on cattle vaccination for bovine tuberculosis as a solution to reduce the disease and the consequent costs of the controls. These results provide important support for the epidemiological benefit that cattle vaccination could have to reduce rates of transmission to and within herds.鈥

This research was supported by 探花直播Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, as well as the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council; Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office; Economic & Social Research Council; Medical Research Council; Natural Environment Research Council; and Defence Science & Technology.

Reference: Fromsa, A. et al: 鈥.鈥 Science, March 2024. DOI: 10.1126/science.adl3962



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