The following position statement is for historical purposes only. The statement was reviewed by the AASV Committee on Transboundary and Emerging Diseases and determined to no longer be relevant. The committee recommended that the AASV Board sunset the statement. The Board adopted the committee's recommendation on April 3, 2017.
Porcine Circovirus Associated Disease (PCVAD) Case Definition [SUNSET April 3, 2017]
This case definition is considered to be a dynamic document which will be altered as additional information becomes available. The CDC model of describing the clinical expression of a new disease when a definitive diagnosis is not known was used in developing the format for the following case definition involving PCVAD.
PCVAD can be subclinical or include one or more of the following clinical manifestations concurrently:
- Multisystemic disease with weight loss (formerly known as PMWS)
- High mortality: Doubling of historical mortality rate without introduction of a new known pathogen.
- Respiratory signs including pneumonia
- Porcine Dermatitis and Nephropathy Syndrome (PDNS)
- Enteric signs including diarrhea and weight loss
- Reproductive disorders including abortions, stillbirths and fetal mummification (diagnosis requires the presence of fetal myocarditis associated with PCV2 antigen in lesions)
PCVAD is a broad categorization of multisystemic diseases that are confirmed by documentation of the following histopathological findings in affected pigs:
- Depletion of lymphoid cells in lymphoid tissues of the growing pigs.
- Disseminated granulomatous inflammation in one or more tissues (e.g. spleen, thymus, intestines, lymph nodes (sternal, bronchial, inguinal and mesenteric), lung, kidney, liver, tonsil, etc.).
- Detection of PCV2 within the lesions of growing pigs.
- PCV2 associated reproductive disease diagnosis requires the presence of PCV2 antigen in fetal myocarditis lesions.
Approved by the AASV Board of Directors on October 3, 2006