Development of a classification system for lung ultrasonographic findings in calves based on the association with cure and production outcomes
- Author
- Stan Jourquin (UGent) , Thomas Lowie (UGent) , Florian Debruyne (UGent) , Laurens Chantillon (UGent) , Mathilde Pas (UGent) , Justine Clinquart (UGent) , Randy Boone (UGent) , Jade Bokma (UGent) and Bart Pardon (UGent)
- Organization
- Project
- Abstract
- The primary objective of this study was to determine associations between ultrasound-based classification systems (using maximum consolidations depth, number of quadrants with consolidation, and consolidation location), clinical indicators, and performance outcomes (ultrasonographic cure, ADG, and cold carcass weight [CCW]) in veal calves following oral metaphylaxis. A retrospective cohort study was conducted on 1,090 white veal calves originating from 3 Belgian veal herds. Clinical scoring and quick thoracic ultrasound (qTUS) followup were done by 4 experienced operators at arrival (wk 0), at the start of the first metaphylactic treatment with doxycycline (treatment initiation, wk 1), at the end of this metaphylactic treatment (short-term evaluation, wk 3) and on a long-term evaluation point (wk 10-12). Cure was defined as complete reaeration of previously consolidated lung tissue. Pathogens were identified using culture and nanopore sequencing. One week after arrival, healthy lungs (no consolidation), mild pneumonia (consolidation <1 cm), moderate pneumonia (consolidation >= 1 but <3 cm), and severe pneumonia (consolidation >= 3 cm) were identified in 46.9%, 12.4%, 21.4%, and 19.4% of calves, respectively. Short-term cure was 59.3% for calves with mild pneumonia, 50.2% for calves with moderate pneumonia, and 32.7% for calves with severe pneumonia, resulting in a total short-term cure of 45.9%. Coronavirus, respiratory syncytial virus, influenza D virus, and Mycoplasmopsis bovis were circulating during treatment. At the long-term evaluation point (wk 10-12), final cure was 59.3%, 55.8%, and 40.3% for calves with mild, moderate, and severe pneumonia at treatment initiation, respectively. Multivariable regression models indicated that different interactions between qTUS categories and number of affected quadrants were associated with short-and long-term odds of cure. Generated models resulted in 3 classification methods, either based on maximum consolidation depth, number of affected quadrants, or an integrated system of both. Calves with clinical pneumonia (Wisconsin score >= 5 and lung consolidation >= 1 cm) had decreased short-term odds to be cured after metaphylaxis compared with calves with subclinical pneumonia (Wisconsin score <5 and lung consolidation >= 1 cm; odds ratio = 0.43; 95% CI: 0.27-0.67). For calves with severe pneumonia in wk 10-12, when compared with calves in a lower qTUS category, ADG and CCW were reduced by 104 g/d (SD = 13; 95% CI: 78-130) and 7.1 kg (SD = 1.9; 95% CI: 3.4-10.9), respectively. Categorization based on maximum consolidation depth, the number of affected quadrants, or an integrated system of both has the potential to be included in an ultrasound scoring system. However, based on the practicality for recording, reporting, and follow-up, the authors recommend categorizing calves into mild, moderate, and severe pneumonia based on maximum consolidation depth measurement, referred to as qTUS score, as a practical classification system for ultrasonographic lung assessment in calves.
- Keywords
- bovine respiratory disease, thoracic ultrasound, cure, pneumonia, treatment evaluation, BOVINE RESPIRATORY-DISEASE, BRONCHOALVEOLAR LAVAGE, BAYESIAN-ESTIMATION, DAIRY CALVES, DIAGNOSIS, GROWTH, ACCURACY, EFFICACY, VACCINE, HEALTH
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-01JZA2QA4CMV1W9E26529CPG20
- MLA
- Jourquin, Stan, et al. “Development of a Classification System for Lung Ultrasonographic Findings in Calves Based on the Association with Cure and Production Outcomes.” JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, vol. 108, no. 7, 2025, pp. 7452–71, doi:10.3168/jds.2024-25386.
- APA
- Jourquin, S., Lowie, T., Debruyne, F., Chantillon, L., Pas, M., Clinquart, J., … Pardon, B. (2025). Development of a classification system for lung ultrasonographic findings in calves based on the association with cure and production outcomes. JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 108(7), 7452–7471. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2024-25386
- Chicago author-date
- Jourquin, Stan, Thomas Lowie, Florian Debruyne, Laurens Chantillon, Mathilde Pas, Justine Clinquart, Randy Boone, Jade Bokma, and Bart Pardon. 2025. “Development of a Classification System for Lung Ultrasonographic Findings in Calves Based on the Association with Cure and Production Outcomes.” JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE 108 (7): 7452–71. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2024-25386.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Jourquin, Stan, Thomas Lowie, Florian Debruyne, Laurens Chantillon, Mathilde Pas, Justine Clinquart, Randy Boone, Jade Bokma, and Bart Pardon. 2025. “Development of a Classification System for Lung Ultrasonographic Findings in Calves Based on the Association with Cure and Production Outcomes.” JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE 108 (7): 7452–7471. doi:10.3168/jds.2024-25386.
- Vancouver
- 1.Jourquin S, Lowie T, Debruyne F, Chantillon L, Pas M, Clinquart J, et al. Development of a classification system for lung ultrasonographic findings in calves based on the association with cure and production outcomes. JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE. 2025;108(7):7452–71.
- IEEE
- [1]S. Jourquin et al., “Development of a classification system for lung ultrasonographic findings in calves based on the association with cure and production outcomes,” JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, vol. 108, no. 7, pp. 7452–7471, 2025.
@article{01JZA2QA4CMV1W9E26529CPG20,
abstract = {{The primary objective of this study was to determine associations between ultrasound-based classification systems (using maximum consolidations depth, number of quadrants with consolidation, and consolidation location), clinical indicators, and performance outcomes (ultrasonographic cure, ADG, and cold carcass weight [CCW]) in veal calves following oral metaphylaxis. A retrospective cohort study was conducted on 1,090 white veal calves originating from 3 Belgian veal herds. Clinical scoring and quick thoracic ultrasound (qTUS) followup were done by 4 experienced operators at arrival (wk 0), at the start of the first metaphylactic treatment with doxycycline (treatment initiation, wk 1), at the end of this metaphylactic treatment (short-term evaluation, wk 3) and on a long-term evaluation point (wk 10-12). Cure was defined as complete reaeration of previously consolidated lung tissue. Pathogens were identified using culture and nanopore sequencing. One week after arrival, healthy lungs (no consolidation), mild pneumonia (consolidation <1 cm), moderate pneumonia (consolidation >= 1 but <3 cm), and severe pneumonia (consolidation >= 3 cm) were identified in 46.9%, 12.4%, 21.4%, and 19.4% of calves, respectively. Short-term cure was 59.3% for calves with mild pneumonia, 50.2% for calves with moderate pneumonia, and 32.7% for calves with severe pneumonia, resulting in a total short-term cure of 45.9%. Coronavirus, respiratory syncytial virus, influenza D virus, and Mycoplasmopsis bovis were circulating during treatment. At the long-term evaluation point (wk 10-12), final cure was 59.3%, 55.8%, and 40.3% for calves with mild, moderate, and severe pneumonia at treatment initiation, respectively. Multivariable regression models indicated that different interactions between qTUS categories and number of affected quadrants were associated with short-and long-term odds of cure. Generated models resulted in 3 classification methods, either based on maximum consolidation depth, number of affected quadrants, or an integrated system of both. Calves with clinical pneumonia (Wisconsin score >= 5 and lung consolidation >= 1 cm) had decreased short-term odds to be cured after metaphylaxis compared with calves with subclinical pneumonia (Wisconsin score <5 and lung consolidation >= 1 cm; odds ratio = 0.43; 95% CI: 0.27-0.67). For calves with severe pneumonia in wk 10-12, when compared with calves in a lower qTUS category, ADG and CCW were reduced by 104 g/d (SD = 13; 95% CI: 78-130) and 7.1 kg (SD = 1.9; 95% CI: 3.4-10.9), respectively. Categorization based on maximum consolidation depth, the number of affected quadrants, or an integrated system of both has the potential to be included in an ultrasound scoring system. However, based on the practicality for recording, reporting, and follow-up, the authors recommend categorizing calves into mild, moderate, and severe pneumonia based on maximum consolidation depth measurement, referred to as qTUS score, as a practical classification system for ultrasonographic lung assessment in calves.}},
author = {{Jourquin, Stan and Lowie, Thomas and Debruyne, Florian and Chantillon, Laurens and Pas, Mathilde and Clinquart, Justine and Boone, Randy and Bokma, Jade and Pardon, Bart}},
issn = {{0022-0302}},
journal = {{JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE}},
keywords = {{bovine respiratory disease,thoracic ultrasound,cure,pneumonia,treatment evaluation,BOVINE RESPIRATORY-DISEASE,BRONCHOALVEOLAR LAVAGE,BAYESIAN-ESTIMATION,DAIRY CALVES,DIAGNOSIS,GROWTH,ACCURACY,EFFICACY,VACCINE,HEALTH}},
language = {{eng}},
number = {{7}},
pages = {{7452--7471}},
title = {{Development of a classification system for lung ultrasonographic findings in calves based on the association with cure and production outcomes}},
url = {{http://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2024-25386}},
volume = {{108}},
year = {{2025}},
}
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