Abstract

Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS) is, arguably, the most impactful disease for the North American swine industry, due to its known considerable economic losses. The Swine Health Monitoring Project (SHMP) monitors and reports weekly new PRRS cases in 766 sow herds across the US. The time-dependent reproduction number (TD-R) is a measure of a pathogen’s transmissibility. It may serve to capture and report PRRS virus (PRRSV) spread at the regional and system levels. The primary objective of the study here was to estimate the TD-R values for PRRSV using regional and system-level PRRS data, and to contrast it with commonly used metrics of disease, such as incidence estimates and space–time clusters. The second objective was to test whether the estimated TD-Rs were homogenous across four US regions. Retrospective monthly incidence data (2009–2016) were available from the SHMP. The dataset was divided into four regions based on location of participants, and demographic and environmental features, namely, South East (North Carolina), Upper Midwest East (UME, Minnesota/Iowa), Upper Midwest West (Nebraska/South Dakota), and South (Oklahoma panhandle). Generation time distributions were fit to incidence data for each region, and used to calculate the TD-Rs. The Kruskal–Wallis test was used to determine whether the median TD-Rs differed across the four areas. Furthermore, we used a space–time permutation model to assess spatial–temporal patterns for the four regions. Results showed TD-Rs were right skewed with median values close to “1” across all regions, confirming that PRRS has an overall endemic nature. Variation in the TD-R patterns was noted across regions and production systems. Statistically significant periods of PRRSV spread (TD-R > 1) were identified for all regions except UME. A minimum of three space–time clusters were detected for all regions considering the time period examined herein; and their overlap with “spreader events” identified by the TD-R method varied according to region. TD-Rs may help to measure PRRS spread to understand, in quantitative terms, disease spread, and, ultimately, support the design, implementation, and monitoring of interventions aimed at mitigating the impact of PRRSV spread in the US.

Highlights

  • Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS) is, arguably, one of the most important diseases of swine affecting the North American industry, aspects of its transmission within production systems and within regions are not completely understood [1]

  • A given swine site may have had more than one outbreak through the study period; the number of outbreak per site reporting an outbreak was higher for the S and Upper Midwest West (UMW) regions (1.76 and 2.21 outbreaks per site, respectively) when compared to South East (SE) and Upper Midwest East (UME) (1.44 and 1.48 outbreaks per site, respectively)

  • The median and mean values for time-dependent reproduction number (TD-R) were similar across all regions and oscillated around 1.0, which is expected for endemic diseases

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS) is, arguably, one of the most important diseases of swine affecting the North American industry, aspects of its transmission within production systems and within regions are not completely understood [1]. The overall hypothesis of this study was that PRRS transmissibility, as measured by the TD-R, would not differ between regions and swine production systems within the US. This result would indicate that epidemiological dynamics are somewhat synchronized across regions, either because of seasonal weather changes or high connectivity among regions due to animal movements, as opposed to each region experiencing distinct temporal dynamics. Our primary objective was to estimate the TD-R values for PRRSV using regional and system-level PRRS data from across the US, and to contrast it to incidence estimates and commonly investigated space–time clusters.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
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