# Evaluating stillborn and litter size as indicators of PRRSV detection in live piglets and the use of stillborn tongue fluids as risk-based samples for PRRSV monitoring

**Authors:** Isadora F. Machado, Peng Li, Jinnan Xiao, Thomas Petznick, Ana Paula P. Silva, Onyekachukwu H. Osemeke, Lucina Galina Pantoja, Phillip Gauger, Giovani Trevisan, Gustavo S. Silva, Daniel C. L. Linhares

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2025.1600064 · Frontiers in Veterinary Science · 2025-05-27

## TL;DR

Stillborn piglet tongue fluids can help detect PRRSV more effectively, especially in small litters, improving disease monitoring in pig farms.

## Contribution

Stillborn tongue fluids are shown as a novel, effective sample for PRRSV monitoring in litters.

## Key findings

- Litters with stillborns had 12.5 times higher odds of PRRSV positivity.
- Small litters had 12.2 times higher odds of PRRSV-positive results.
- Positive stillborn tongue fluids increased odds of viremic liveborns by 17.6 times.

## Abstract

A risk-based approach to animal selection for sampling enhances pathogen detection by increasing the probability of selecting an animal harboring the pathogen while requiring a smaller sample size. Postmortem tongue fluids (TF) have emerged as a promising risk-based approach, with a PRRSV RNA positivity rate similar to serum, processing fluids, and family oral fluids. Thus, this study assessed the effect of stillborn presence, litter size, and PRRSV RNA detection by RT-qPCR in stillborn TF on the probability of having viremic piglets within the litter.

Samples from 130 litters were collected within 12 hours after farrowing from two breeding herds. TF and intracardiac blood were collected from stillborns, and tail blood swabs were collected from liveborn littermates within the selected litters. Samples were individually tested for PRRSV RNA detection by RT-qPCR. Litters with ≤ 11 liveborn piglets were defined as small. Generalized linear regression models were used to evaluate the litter size, presence of stillborns, and stillborn PRRSV results on the probability that a litter or at least one liveborn littermate would test PRRSV-positive.

The live piglets’ mean positivity within the litter was 5.0%, while the total born was 4.6%. Litters with at least one stillborn had 12.5 times higher odds of having a PRRSV-positive result, and 4.8 times higher odds of having at least one viremic liveborn piglet. In small litters, the odds of having a PRRSV-positive result increased 12.2 times, whereas the odds of having a viremic liveborn littermate increased 10.8 times. When the stillborn TF was positive, the odds of having a viremic liveborn littermate increased 17.6 times.

In conclusion, stillborn TFs were a reliable indicator of PRRSV status among litters. Liveborn piglets from litters with PRRSV-positive stillborn TF or small litters had greater odds of testing PRRSV-positive. Therefore, stillborn TF collection and targeting small litters improve PRRSV detection and support farrowing room biocontainment strategies.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Sus scrofa (taxon 9823)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (no rank) [taxon 28344]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

35 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12150799/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12150799