Table 5. Desired attributes of AI vaccines addressing the smallholder segment.
Desired attribute | Current situation |
---|---|
Inexpensive | Current cost for inactivated AIV vaccine: $0.03–0.10/dose plus cost of administration
($0.05–0.07 per dose for individual handling and injection) |
Use in multiple avian
species |
Most vaccines are used in meat, layer and breeder chickens although a large number of
doses also used in ducks; minor amounts in turkeys, geese, quail, etc. |
Single dose protection | Most situations require a minimum of 2 doses; prime-boost scenario is optimal with
revaccination in long-lived birds at 6–12-month intervals |
Mass application | 95.5% is inactivated vaccine administered by handling and injecting individual birds and 4.5%
as vectored vaccine given by mass spray vaccination |
Identify infected birds in
vaccinated population (DIVA) |
Serological differentiation tests are available, but only minor use. Most vaccine applied
without using a serological DIVA strategy for surveillance |
Overcome maternal
antibody interference |
Maternal antibody to AIV hemagglutinin or virus vector inhibits primary immune response.
Initial vaccination must be timed for declining maternal antibody titers to allow optimal primary immune response |
Given at 1 day of age in
hatchery or in ovo |
Inactivated vaccine provides poor protection when given at 1 day of age. Vectored vaccines
can be given at 1 day of age, but generally require a boost with inactivated vaccine 10 days or more later |
Universal vaccine | The majority of inactivated whole AIV vaccines use reverse genetic generated vaccine seed
strains to antigenically match field viruses. The vaccinal strain of virus should also be a strong immunogen |
Thermostable | Killed AI vaccines, rNDV-AI and rFPV-AI vaccines require refrigeration and rHVT-AI vaccine
must be stored in liquid nitrogen |