影响幼猫初次狂犬病疫苗接种结果的因素。

IF 2 3区 农林科学 Q4 IMMUNOLOGY Comparative Immunology Microbiology and Infectious Diseases Pub Date : 2024-08-02 DOI:10.1016/j.cimid.2024.102225
Konstantia E. Tasioudi , Dimos Papatheodorou , Fotios Symeonidis , Peristera Iliadou , Polychronis Kostoulas , Maria Gianniou , Eleni Chondrokouki , Olga Mangana-Vougiouka , Mathios E. Mylonakis
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摘要

有关影响猫科动物狂犬病疫苗初次免疫接种结果的因素的数据有限。本研究旨在评估特定因素(信号、疫苗接种次数、疫苗品牌和距上次接种疫苗的时间)是否与接种单价狂犬病灭活疫苗的幼猫的总体抗体滴度达标和绝对滴度相关。在分析使用 FAVN 试验对首次年度加强免疫前进行检测的猫的数据集时,应用了逻辑和线性回归模型。在 379 只猫中,94.2% 的猫的滴度达到或超过了标准阈值(≥0.5 IU/ml)。事实证明,距上次接种疫苗的时间是预测疫苗接种成功与否的主要因素。接种过两次疫苗的猫的滴度往往较高。年龄、性别、品种和疫苗类型对结果没有影响。本研究表明,幼猫接种疫苗失败的情况并不常见,而距离最近一次接种疫苗的时间间隔是预测狂犬病疫苗接种成功与否的最重要因素。
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Factors affecting the outcome of primary rabies vaccination in young cats

Limited data exist on the factors affecting feline rabies vaccination outcomes during primary immunization. This study aimed to assess if specific factors (signalment, vaccination count, vaccine brand, and time since last vaccination) correlated with meeting global antibody titer standards and absolute titers in young cats given monovalent inactivated rabies vaccines. Analyzing a dataset from cats tested before their first annual booster using the FAVN test, logistic and linear regression models were applied. Among 379 cats, 94.2 % achieved titers meeting or exceeding the standard threshold (≥0.5 IU/ml). Time since last vaccination proved to be the primary predictor of vaccination success. Cats receiving two vaccinations tended toward higher titers. Age, sex, breed, and vaccine type showed no impact on outcomes. The present study indicates that vaccination failure in young cats is uncommon, and that the time interval from the latest vaccination is the single most important predictor of successful rabies vaccination.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
102
审稿时长
40 days
期刊介绍: Comparative Immunology, Microbiology & Infectious Diseases aims to respond to the concept of "One Medicine" and to provide a venue for scientific exchange. Based on the concept of "Comparative Medicine" interdisciplinary cooperation between specialists in human and animal medicine is of mutual interest and benefit. Therefore, there is need to combine the respective interest of physicians, veterinarians and other health professionals for comparative studies relevant to either human or animal medicine . The journal is open to subjects of common interest related to the immunology, immunopathology, microbiology, parasitology and epidemiology of human and animal infectious diseases, especially zoonotic infections, and animal models of human infectious diseases. The role of environmental factors in disease emergence is emphasized. CIMID is mainly focusing on applied veterinary and human medicine rather than on fundamental experimental research.
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