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Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening Project A function of Montana Beef Quality Assurance Sponsored by Montana State University & Montana Stockgrowers Association In collaboration with Animal Profiling International, Inc. Intervet, Inc.

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Page 1: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

Montana BVD-PI Herd

Screening Project

A function of

Montana Beef Quality Assurance

Sponsored by

Montana State University

&

Montana Stockgrowers Association In collaboration with

Animal Profiling International, Inc.

Intervet, Inc.

Page 2: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

BVD-PI Herd Screening

1) Helping reduce

sickness potential in individual cow herds.

2) Adding value to commercial and seedstock cattle.

3) A template for on-

ranch biosecurity.

Page 3: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

Biosecurity Basics

• Increasing disease resistance through vaccination. • Screening for disease agents. • Animal identification and recordkeeping. • Prudent livestock movement and handling.

Page 4: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

Keys to Biosecurity & Health Management

Don’t rely solely on vaccination.

Attention to proper nutrition.

Hold all “non-biological” pairs suspect.

Minimize sorting and

mixing within and between herds.

Page 5: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

BVD Begins at the Ranch Transient

Infection

vs.

Persistent Infection

PI calves are only “created” during gestation.

Once a PI, always a PI -- Not a PI, never a PI.

Page 6: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

BVD-PI Screening Tactics using

Pooled PCR “Performing a reverse transcriptase–PCR

assay on pooled fresh tissue samples is a “sensitive and specific method” of screening cattle for persistent infection with BVD virus.” *

PCR = polymerase chain reaction

* James A. Kennedy, DVM, MS, Colorado State University Diagnostic Laboratory, Rocky Ford Branch; JAVMA, Vol. 229, No. 9, November 2006

Page 7: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

Screening Procedure Dry ear notches are taken

by ranchers and shipped (chilled) overnight.

Samples are “pooled” and assayed for BVDV RNA.

Screening results returned to the producer “next business day” upon receipt.

PIs are confirmed using ear notch samples obtained from the suspect animals 3-4 weeks after initial sampling.

Page 8: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

Tissue Collection Procedure

Write animal ID on tube (we suggest using a small “Sharpie”-type permanent marker).

This is the size sample you need to submit.

Collect small ear notch and place in dry tube (do not place in formalin or other preservative).

Page 9: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

Collection Procedure

The best areas of the ear to take the sample.

Need only one piece of

tissue.

Maintain collected samples in a cooler with ice packs or in freezer prior to shipment. Samples can be frozen immediately after collection and tested within 30 days.

Page 10: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

Key Screening Points “Whole herd” screen before breeding to

avoid exposing pregnant cows to a PI animal during early gestation.

Cows do not need to be screened unless

they have a positive PI calf. Surveillance should include the screening

of as many aborted fetuses, stillborns and pre-weaning deaths as possible – and calves from “late calvers.”

Page 11: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

Biosecurity

Open replacement heifers should be screened for BVD-PI status before commingling with herd.

Purchased bred heifers or

cows should be kept separate from the home herd and their calves should be screened.

Bulls should be purchased

as BVD-PI screened or screened prior to breeding season.

Page 12: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

More Key Points Fetal infection with BVDV can lead to fetal

death, birth of deformed calves, underdeveloped calves or a visually normal calf at birth.

PIs that live to be breeding females can

horizontally transfer the virus to other animals in the herd – and they will always produce a PI calf.

If an animal is negative for PI status,

there’s no need to ever retest that animal. PI “positive” animals should be removed

from the herd well in advance of the breeding season.

Page 13: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

The Costs of BVD

• One PI animal in a cow herd $14-24/cow/year – due to increased herd

health costs and loses in reproductive efficiency.

* Bob Larson, DVM, PhD, University of Missouri, Columbia, Planned BVD

Control in Beef Herds, Conference proceedings “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan. 31, 2006, Denver, CO.

Page 14: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

The Costs of BVD

• At the feedlot - $47/head from one PI calf entering the

feedyard. * Bill Hessman DVM, Sublette, KS. Effects of Bovine Viral Diarrhea

Virus (BVDV) Persistently Infected (PI) Calves in the Feedyard and

Management of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver, CO.

Page 15: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

The Costs of BVD • Guy Loneragan of West Texas A&M University

found feedyard PI prevalence to be about 0.17% (1.7 PIs per 1,000 head).

• The probability for initial treatment with respiratory disease is 43% greater for cattle exposed to BVD-PI cattle in the same pen or an adjoining pen.

G. Loneragan; Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association

(JAVMA), 2005.

Page 16: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

Returns To Screening???

• “We always suggest to ranchers the first reason to screen herds for BVD-PIs should be for herd health purposes.”

But…

• “We think calves screened as PI-negative deserve a price advantage over unscreened calves.”

Page 17: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

2006 Project

65 Montana ranching operations

38,535 head ranging from

26 - 2,500+ head/operation

79% calves 19% replacement heifers

2% bulls and mature cows

Page 18: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

2006 PI-Positive Details 1. 14 calves from 1st calf heifers of 282 total cow-calf

pairs in the herd. Vaccinated with a killed vaccine. Owner reported significant biosecurity concerns.

2. 5 calves from 4-12 yr-old cows in one herd. A non- vaccinated herd.

3. 1st calf heifer and her calf (2) -- “The PI Pair.”

Vaccination history unknown.

4. 1 calf (cow died before she could be tested). Vaccination history unknown.

5. 1 “mature” cow. Vaccination history unknown.

6. 1 steer calf (fall screened) – dam negative. Screened at the request of the buyer.

Page 19: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

Exam Time!!

Case: 1 steer calf (found at weaning) – dam negative.

Question: Should this rancher screen his calves this

year????

ABSOLUTELY!!!

Page 20: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

2007 Project • To date, 325 cattle herds enrolled (~350

herds total anticipated). • 92,600 head of cattle enrolled (~100,000

head anticipated by June 1).

Page 21: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

2007 Montana Project The project pays for:

• Initial pooled PCR screening of tissue samples (up to $250 per ranching operation) $1.95 per sample (for groups >100). • A “small” (pig type) ear-notching tool used for tissue sampling. • Tubes, ice packs, box liners and shipping to the participant. The participant pays for: • Initial pooled PCR screening costs over $250. • “Re-test” costs in “positive” pools at $1.75 per sample.

--------------------------------- Ship samples via UPS (preferred), FedEx, DHL, U.S. Postal Service, etc., to our participating lab Shipping costs compliments of Intervet, Inc.

Page 22: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

The Next Year (s)? We don’t necessarily recommend “perpetual” whole-herd screening:

IF 1) You maintain a vaccination protocol based on a

modified-live product.

2) You screen all new entries into the herd. Ask the PI question !!!

3) You re-screen herds with suspected breaches in

biosecurity.

--------------------------------------------------

Depending on marketing value of “PI Screened” calves, there may be incentive to continue testing all calves.

Page 23: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

Ask & Assess

Fundamentals to the new age of biosecurity: 1) Ask where purchased animals originated.

2) Ask about the herd health history.

3) Assess the risks associated with buying

the animals.

Page 24: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

Ultimately assuring beef quality… "Each time you treat an animal for a sickness in a feedyard…

- Dr. Gary Smith, Colorado State University

…you run the risk of losing a quality grade and a tenderness score.”

Page 25: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

Acknowledgements

Dr. James A. Kennedy, DVM, MS, Colorado State University Veterinary Diagnostic Lab, Rocky Ford Branch, Rocky Ford, CO, for his inspiration in BVDv control and his demonstrated expertise in PI screening. Dr. Bruce Hoffman, DVM, president Animal Profiling International, Inc., for his dedication to this project and assistance in its design – and for being available to provide individual project participants advice and technical assistance in BVDv elimination.

Page 26: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,

The Montana Beef Quality Assurance Team

• Clint Peck, Director, Montana Beef Quality

Assurance, Montana State University, Ph: 406-896-9068 / 406-671-0851 (mobile); [email protected] • Dr. John Paterson, Montana State University

Extension Beef Specialist. Ph: 406-994-5562 / 406-581-3492 (mobile); [email protected]

• Mo Harbac, Montana Beef Network. Ph: 406-994-4323; [email protected]

Page 27: Montana BVD-PI Herd Screening ProjectManagement of PI Calves after Initial Identification, oral presentation “BVD Control and Eradication: The future is now!” Jan 31, 2006, Denver,