Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (PRRSV) is a globally significant pathogen of pigs. Controlling the entry of PRRSV to swine breeding herds is critical to maximizing animal health, welfare and productivity. The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of improved biosecurity on the PRRSV incidence risk and to understand whether these practices influenced breeding herd productivity.
A retrospective cohort study evaluating PRRSV incidence risk was conducted over a 3-year period, from July 1, 2021, to June 30, 2024, across breeding herds from a commercial swine production system (Pipestone, MN). Over the course of the project, 69 herds/321,013 sows participated in year 1, 76 herds/381,404 sows in year 2, and 75 herds/384,207 sows in year 3.
Across the database, two cohorts of herds which differed in their level of biosecurity practiced were classified as Next Generation Biosecurity (NGB) COMPLETE or NGB INCOMPLETE. Next Generation Biosecurity uses science-based measures for the prevention of the PRRS virus and improves productivity in swine breeding herds. The protocols evaluate mechanical, aerosol and feed risk at the sow farm level, instead of only focusing on mechanical risk.
PRRSV incidence risk was calculated using MSHMP guidelines for each disease year, and over the 3-year period. The difference in the proportion of PRRSV positive herds (# new PRRSV infections/# breeding herds) across the 3-year period was analyzed for significance by Chi square, the cumulative PRRSV incidence risk across all herds during the 3-year period was calculated, and the association between the level of biosecurity (COMPLETE vs INCOMPLETE) and disease burden (PRRSV incidence risk) was tested by Chi square.