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A randomised control trial to evaluate the effectiveness of a commercial vaccine for pinkeye in Australian beef cattle
Journal article   Peer reviewed

A randomised control trial to evaluate the effectiveness of a commercial vaccine for pinkeye in Australian beef cattle

Mac Kneipp, Alexandra C. Green, Merran Govendir, Michael Laurence and Navneet K. Dhand
Preventive veterinary medicine, Vol.210, 105815
2023
PMID: 36512867

Abstract

Australia Cattle Infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis Piliguard Pinkeye Vaccine
Pinkeye (a generic term to describe infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis) is a significant disease of cattle worldwide, impacting productivity and animal welfare. One commercial pinkeye vaccine, a systematically administered Moraxella bovis bacterin, has been available in Australia since 2007. This is the first field trial of the effectiveness of this vaccine for the prevention of naturally occurring disease in Australia. Extensively run beef herds in southwest Queensland that regularly experienced pinkeye were enrolled in the trial and animals were randomly allocated to vaccinated and control groups in different proportions in each herd. The subsequent incidence of clinical pinkeye between the two groups was compared for animals less than one-year-old. Data were analysed from 649 cattle from five herds over two pinkeye seasons: three herds of 390 calves from 1st November 2019 to 20th January 2020 and two herds of 259 calves from 23rd September 2020 to 21st April 2021. Pinkeye was common with 24% of all calves (156/649) contracting the disease during the trial. Univariable and multivariable binary logistic mixed-effect models were fitted to account for clustered data and potential residual confounding due to sex, weight, breed, coat colour, and periocular pigmentation. The incidence of pinkeye was not significantly different between vaccinated and control groups, both alone (p = 0.67) and after adjusting for sex and weight differences (p = 0.69). The vaccine was not protective against naturally occurring pinkeye under the field conditions.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.248 Sexually Transmitted Infections
1.248.1317 Mycoplasma Infections
Web Of Science research areas
Veterinary Sciences
ESI research areas
Plant & Animal Science
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