# The narrow window of protection: protective efficacy of maternally derived antibodies against virulent classical swine fever virus in Japan

**Authors:** Katsuhiko Fukai, Tatsuya Nishi, Mitsutaka Ikezawa, Rie Kawaguchi, Kazuki Morioka

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s13567-025-01583-z · Veterinary Research · 2025-07-16

## TL;DR

The study finds that maternally derived antibodies offer protection against a virulent swine fever virus in piglets, but only within a narrow range of antibody levels.

## Contribution

The study identifies a specific protective threshold for maternally derived antibodies against a current CSFV strain in Japan.

## Key findings

- Piglets with MDA titres of 45–362 showed clinical protection against JPN/1/2018 CSFV.
- MDA titres above 105 against the GPE− strain correlate with protection but may interfere with vaccination.
- Individual factors like health status can affect protection despite sufficient MDA levels.

## Abstract

This study investigated the protective efficacy of maternally derived antibodies (MDAs) against the currently circulating virulent classical swine fever virus (CSFV) strain in Japan (JPN/1/2018). Thirty-eight piglets from guinea-pig exaltation of Newcastle disease virus-negative phenomenon (GPE−)–vaccinated (Groups 1–2) or unvaccinated sows (Group 3) were divided into three groups: Group 1 (n = 16, MDA titres < 2 to 5.6 against JPN/1/2018), Group 2 (n = 16, MDA titres 45–362), and Group 3 (n = 6, no MDAs). All piglets were orally challenged with the JPN/1/2018 strain and monitored for clinical signs, viremia, viral shedding, and viral tissue distribution. Groups 1 and 3 showed similar clinical manifestations, viremia, viral shedding and viral distribution patterns, whereas Group 2 piglets generally remained clinically normal with limited viral detection in clinical samples and organs. On the basis of these results, an MDA titre of 45 against JPN/1/2018 was determined as the approximate protective threshold. The use of antigenic relatedness (r1) values between the JPN/1/2018 and GPE− strains (mean r1 = 0.43) corresponds to an MDA titre of approximately 105 against the GPE− strain. However, two Group 2 piglets whose MDA titres were above the threshold died during the experiment, suggesting that individual factors such as body size, social hierarchy, and health status may influence protection. The narrow window between the protective threshold (MDA titre against the GPE− strain of 105) and the titre that interferes with the vaccine-induced antibody response (MDA titre against the GPE− strain of ≥ 128) presents challenges for farm management, highlighting the importance of combining vaccination with strict biosecurity measures.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13567-025-01583-z.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** classical swine fever (MONDO:0025087)
- **Species:** Sus scrofa (taxon 9823)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** viremia (MESH:D014766)
- **Chemicals:** MDA (-)
- **Species:** Classical swine fever virus (no rank) [taxon 11096], Cavia porcellus (domestic guinea pig, species) [taxon 10141], Newcastle disease virus [taxon 11176]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

5 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12269211/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12269211