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Vietnam Works With US to Make First African Swine Fever Vaccine

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  • Southeast Asian nation first to start commercial production
  • Deadly hog virus slashed herds in China, elsewhere in Asia
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Vaccines against African swine fever are in the pilot period at Navetco National Veterinary Joint Stock Company. Việt Nam has announced to it will develop a commercial vaccine against the disease on Wednesday. — Photo baodautu.vn

Vietnam has collaborated with US experts to produce the world’s first commercially viable vaccine against African swine fever, a disease that has killed millions of hogs across Asia and pushed up global pork prices.

The country partnered with scientists at the Agriculture Research Service of the US Department of Agriculture to develop the vaccine, which is now being produced in Vietnam, Deputy Minister of Agriculture Phung Duc Tien said on the government website.

TOPSHOT-VIETNAM-CHINA-ANIMALS-DISEASE-ECONOMY-PORK

Health officials spray disinfectant on dead pigs in an isolated quarantined pit, to stop the spread of African Swine Fever, outside Hanoi in 2019.
Photographer: Manan Vatsyayana/AFP/Getty Images

The deadly hog virus swept across China from 2018, slashing herds in the world’s biggest producer and consumer of pork, boosting imports and sending meat costs soaring. It spread into other Asian countries and also showed up in Europe, in places like Germany and Italy. It’s not known to harm humans.


The virus is highly contagious in hogs and can be 100% lethal for the animals, causing high fever, loss of appetite and hemorrhaging on the skin and internal organs. Governments have sought to control the disease by culling herds, restricting transport of pigs and improving hygiene on farms. Global efforts to find a safe and effective vaccine had long proved elusive.


Still, scientists with the USDA’s Agriculture Research Service have been working on a vaccine, which is based on deleting a gene, and the agency announced in April that it had passed a key safety test needed for regulatory approval.

The agency said that the safety studies were necessary to get the green light for use in Vietnam and eventually other countries, and commercial use will depend on approval from animal health departments in each nation.

Vietnam said this week it imported the attenuated strain from the US in 2020 and carried out more research, which showed that it provides immunity for six months. Navetco National Veterinary JSC is producing the vaccine in the country, and the USDA confirmed in May its safety and efficacy, said deputy minister Tien. Vietnam is looking to export the vaccine, he said.

 

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