European veterinary barometer for bovine respiratory diseases : a comprehensive tool for mapping diagnostic test results and geolocation for respiratory tract samples from cattle
- Author
- Jade Bokma (UGent) , Inge Santman-Berends, Gema Vidal, Miel Hostens (UGent) , Stefaan Ribbens, Julien Evrard, Sebastiaan Theuns (UGent) , Cosmé Sánchez-Miguel, Gerdien van Schaik and Bart Pardon (UGent)
- Organization
- Abstract
- Objectives: Awareness of circulating BRD pathogens could support pathogen-oriented decision making, such as preventive measures. To provide support to veterinarians and farmers in the control of BRD, we aim to develop the European Veterinary Barometer, which integrates, visualizes, and analyzes diagnostic test results from European laboratories. Methods: As part of DECIDE (Horizon 2020, No. 101000494), anonymized diagnostic test results from cattle with BRD (2016-2022) were collected from Belgian, Dutch, and Irish laboratories. The datasets included test results for BRD pathogens, date, sample types, diagnostic methods, and geolocation. A prototype website was developed to visualize the results. Results: After aggregation to the herd level, 11,838 results remained (BEL: 8,678, NLD: 1,404, IRL: 1,756). So far, 18.1% (1,327/7,355) tested positive for Bovine Respiratory Syncytial Virus, 18.0% (899/4,957) for Bovine Corona Virus, 6.4% (470/7,387) for Parainfluenza Type-3, 22.4% (1,917/8,544) for Mycoplasma bovis, 25.7% (2,728/10,602) for Mannheimia haemolytica, 46.3% (4,894/10,581) for Pasteurella multocida, and 17.2% (1,822/10,596) for Histophilus somni. Viruses were more prevalent in winter months, and Dutch samples showed lower rates for P. multocida and H. somni compared to other countries, probably due to variations in diagnostic methods. Conclusions: The European Veterinary Barometer for BRD could be used to provide insight in the prevalence of pathogens that cause BRD. The tool can stimulate pathogen specific implementation of risk mitigating measures in certain areas and periods. We aim to expand the tool with data from additional countries, an early warning component, and the economic impact of the pathogens.
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-01HBAXB88KZHJP04616R4NTR1J
- MLA
- Bokma, Jade, et al. “European Veterinary Barometer for Bovine Respiratory Diseases : A Comprehensive Tool for Mapping Diagnostic Test Results and Geolocation for Respiratory Tract Samples from Cattle.” 5th International Conference of the European College of Veterinary Microbiology (ICECVM 2023), Abstracts, 2023.
- APA
- Bokma, J., Santman-Berends, I., Vidal, G., Hostens, M., Ribbens, S., Evrard, J., … Pardon, B. (2023). European veterinary barometer for bovine respiratory diseases : a comprehensive tool for mapping diagnostic test results and geolocation for respiratory tract samples from cattle. 5th International Conference of the European College of Veterinary Microbiology (ICECVM 2023), Abstracts. Presented at the 5th International Conference of the European College of Veterinary Microbiology (ICECVM 2023), Bled, Slovenia.
- Chicago author-date
- Bokma, Jade, Inge Santman-Berends, Gema Vidal, Miel Hostens, Stefaan Ribbens, Julien Evrard, Sebastiaan Theuns, Cosmé Sánchez-Miguel, Gerdien van Schaik, and Bart Pardon. 2023. “European Veterinary Barometer for Bovine Respiratory Diseases : A Comprehensive Tool for Mapping Diagnostic Test Results and Geolocation for Respiratory Tract Samples from Cattle.” In 5th International Conference of the European College of Veterinary Microbiology (ICECVM 2023), Abstracts.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Bokma, Jade, Inge Santman-Berends, Gema Vidal, Miel Hostens, Stefaan Ribbens, Julien Evrard, Sebastiaan Theuns, Cosmé Sánchez-Miguel, Gerdien van Schaik, and Bart Pardon. 2023. “European Veterinary Barometer for Bovine Respiratory Diseases : A Comprehensive Tool for Mapping Diagnostic Test Results and Geolocation for Respiratory Tract Samples from Cattle.” In 5th International Conference of the European College of Veterinary Microbiology (ICECVM 2023), Abstracts.
- Vancouver
- 1.Bokma J, Santman-Berends I, Vidal G, Hostens M, Ribbens S, Evrard J, et al. European veterinary barometer for bovine respiratory diseases : a comprehensive tool for mapping diagnostic test results and geolocation for respiratory tract samples from cattle. In: 5th International Conference of the European College of Veterinary Microbiology (ICECVM 2023), Abstracts. 2023.
- IEEE
- [1]J. Bokma et al., “European veterinary barometer for bovine respiratory diseases : a comprehensive tool for mapping diagnostic test results and geolocation for respiratory tract samples from cattle,” in 5th International Conference of the European College of Veterinary Microbiology (ICECVM 2023), Abstracts, Bled, Slovenia, 2023.
@inproceedings{01HBAXB88KZHJP04616R4NTR1J,
abstract = {{Objectives: Awareness of circulating BRD pathogens could support pathogen-oriented decision making, such as preventive measures. To provide support to veterinarians and farmers in the control of BRD, we aim to develop the European Veterinary Barometer, which integrates, visualizes, and analyzes diagnostic test results from European laboratories.
Methods: As part of DECIDE (Horizon 2020, No. 101000494), anonymized diagnostic test results from cattle with BRD (2016-2022) were collected from Belgian, Dutch, and Irish laboratories. The datasets included test results for BRD pathogens, date, sample types, diagnostic methods, and geolocation. A prototype website was developed to visualize the results.
Results: After aggregation to the herd level, 11,838 results remained (BEL: 8,678, NLD: 1,404, IRL: 1,756). So far, 18.1% (1,327/7,355) tested positive for Bovine Respiratory Syncytial Virus, 18.0% (899/4,957) for Bovine Corona Virus, 6.4% (470/7,387) for Parainfluenza Type-3, 22.4% (1,917/8,544) for Mycoplasma bovis, 25.7% (2,728/10,602) for Mannheimia haemolytica, 46.3% (4,894/10,581) for Pasteurella multocida, and 17.2% (1,822/10,596) for Histophilus somni. Viruses were more prevalent in winter months, and Dutch samples showed lower rates for P. multocida and H. somni compared to other countries, probably due to variations in diagnostic methods.
Conclusions: The European Veterinary Barometer for BRD could be used to provide insight in the prevalence of pathogens that cause BRD. The tool can stimulate pathogen specific implementation of risk mitigating measures in certain areas and periods. We aim to expand the tool with data from additional countries, an early warning component, and the economic impact of the pathogens.}},
author = {{Bokma, Jade and Santman-Berends, Inge and Vidal, Gema and Hostens, Miel and Ribbens, Stefaan and Evrard, Julien and Theuns, Sebastiaan and Sánchez-Miguel, Cosmé and van Schaik, Gerdien and Pardon, Bart}},
booktitle = {{5th International Conference of the European College of Veterinary Microbiology (ICECVM 2023), Abstracts}},
language = {{und}},
location = {{Bled, Slovenia}},
title = {{European veterinary barometer for bovine respiratory diseases : a comprehensive tool for mapping diagnostic test results and geolocation for respiratory tract samples from cattle}},
url = {{https://icecvmconf.org/#info}},
year = {{2023}},
}