Abstract

In this study, three different diagnostic tests for parvovirus were compared with vaccination status and parvovirus genotype in suspected canine parvovirus cases. Faecal samples from vaccinated (N17) and unvaccinated or unknown vaccination status (N41) dogs that had clinical signs of parvovirus infection were tested using three different assays of antigen tests, conventional and quantitative PCR tests. The genotype of each sample was determined by sequencing. In addition to the suspected parvovirus samples, 21 faecal samples from apparently healthy dogs were tested in three diagnostic tests to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of the tests. The antigen test was positive in 41.2% of vaccinated dogs and 73.2% of unvaccinated diseased dogs. Conventional PCR and qPCR were positive for canine parvovirus (CPV) in 82.4% of vaccinated dogs and 92.7% of unvaccinated dogs. CPV type-2c (CPV-2c) was detected in 82.75% of dogs (12 vaccinated and 36 unvaccinated dogs), CPV-2b was detected in 5.17% dogs (one vaccinated and two unvaccinated) and CPV-2a in 1.72% vaccinated dog. Mean Ct values in qPCR for vaccinated dogs were higher than the unvaccinated dogs (p = 0.049), suggesting that vaccinated dogs shed less virus, even in clinical forms of CPV. CPV-2c was the dominant subtype infecting dogs in both vaccinated and unvaccinated cases. Faecal antigen testing failed to identify a substantial proportion of CPV-2c infected dogs, likely due to low sensitivity. The faecal samples from apparently healthy dogs (n = 21) showed negative results in all three tests. Negative CPV faecal antigen results should be viewed with caution until they are confirmed by molecular methods.

Highlights

  • Canine parvovirus (CPV) belongs to the family Parvoviridae, the subfamily Parvovirinae and the genus Protoparvovirus

  • The clinical history of the tested dogs showed that among 58 referred samples, 17 patients had a history of canine parvovirus (CPV) vaccination and 41 patients were unvaccinated or of unknown CPV

  • CPV type-2c (CPV-2c) was the predominant strain detected in vaccinated and unvaccinated Australian dogs affected by parvoviral enteritis between 2015 and 2019 in this study

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Summary

Introduction

Canine parvovirus (CPV) belongs to the family Parvoviridae, the subfamily Parvovirinae and the genus Protoparvovirus (previously Parvovirus). Protoparvovirus comprises feline panleukopenia virus (FPV), canine parvovirus (CPV), mink enteritis virus (MEV) and raccoon parvovirus (RPV) [1]. The clinical form of canine parvovirus (CPV) was first reported in the United States in 1978 and the isolated virus was named CPV type-2 (CPV-2) to distinguished from canine parvovirus type 1 (CPV-1). The emergence of CPV-2 in the United States as a canine pathogen was a consequence of “jumping the species barrier” from FPV to CPV-2 [3,4]. CPV-2 was further selected for growth within canine cells, making dogs a better host [5]. The establishment of CPV-2 in the dog population was strongly associated with post-transmission adaptation or pre-existing FPV variants in domestic or wild carnivores such as mink and foxes [6,7]

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