Molecular detection of canine viral infectious diseases in China: an investigation from 2018 to 2024
Caihong Liu, Yalei Chen, Ningning Cui, Yihang Yang, Hangtian Ding, Hongchao Wu, Yuxiu Liu, Kegong Tian, Xingang Xu

TL;DR
This study analyzed the prevalence of ten canine viral diseases in China from 2018 to 2024, finding that CPV-2 was the most common and that vaccination status significantly affected infection rates.
Contribution
The study provides a comprehensive, nationwide analysis of multiple canine viral pathogens in China over six years, including insights into genotype distribution and vaccine efficacy.
Findings
CPV-2 was the most prevalent virus, with CPV-2c being the dominant genotype.
Young dogs under six months and unvaccinated dogs were more susceptible to CPV-2 and CDV.
A distinct phylogenetic clade of CPIV F gene may reduce vaccine effectiveness against CPIV.
Abstract
To analyze the prevalence of canine viral diseases in China, including canine parvovirus type 2 (CPV-2), canine coronavirus (CCoV), canine distemper virus (CDV), canine herpesvirus type 1 (CHV-1), canine parainfluenza virus (CPIV), canine influenza virus (CIV), canine respiratory coronavirus (CRCoV), canine adenovirus 2 (CAV-2), canine adenovirus 1 (CAV-1), and canine rotavirus (CRV), a total of 2,492 samples from dogs in 22 provinces were tested between 2018 and 2024. The results showed that 1,236 dogs (49.6%) tested positive for one or more pathogens, CPV-2 (30.6%) being the most commonly detected, with CPV-2c being the most common genotype. The prevalence of CPV-2, CCoV, CDV, and CHV-1 varied significantly depending on the season, geographical location, and age, with young dogs (<6 months) being more susceptible to infection. The positive rates of CPV-2 and CDV were significantly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVirus-based gene therapy research · Animal Virus Infections Studies · Respiratory viral infections research
