The diagnosis of Q fever is sometimes difficult because the clinical picture is not specific to the disease. Indeed, abortions, metritis, retained placenta and other fertility disorders can have many causes.
Therefore, laboratory tests are essential for Coxiella burnetii diagnosis, the bacterium responsible for the disease.
As with any infectious disease, diagnosis can be direct or indirect. Direct diagnosis is the search for the pathogen itself. There are 3 main direct diagnostic techniques for Q fever:
Indirect diagnosis is based on the detection of antibodies produced by the animal in response to the infection. This means that we do not look for the bacteria itself but for the immune response it has triggered. Samples for indirect Coxiella burnetii diagnosis are blood and milk, including bulk tank milk. Different techniques exist:
The choice of the method for Coxiella burnetii diagnosis should be based on the objective to be achieved:
Direct individual tests are of interest for the diagnosis of an abortion. The analysis is then carried out on the placenta or the stomach contents of the foetus. In all other cases, direct individual diagnosis is of little value because the excretion of the bacteria in milk, vaginal discharge and faeces is intermittent. The risk of a false negative Coxiella burnetii diagnosis is therefore high, unless several samples are taken several days apart and from different matrices, in which case the cost of testing becomes high.
Outside of abortion cases, individual diagnosis is therefore based on indirect diagnosis by serology. This type of analysis makes it possible to know whether the animal has been in contact with the bacteria during its life. However, it is impossible to know, by this method, if the animal sampled is still infected, and therefore potentially a shedder of the bacteria. An overestimation of the infection is therefore possible. Furthermore, an animal vaccinated against Q fever may also have a positive result without being infected with Coxiella burnetii.
At the herd level, both types of diagnosis (direct and indirect) are possible.
Indirect diagnosis by serology on blood or milk allows to know if the herd has been exposed to the bacteria. However, for reliable Coxiella burnetii diagnosis, it is desirable to sample a sufficient number of animals. Even in a heavily infected herd, it is rare that more than 50% of the animals have antibodies against the disease. If sampling is too low, there is a risk of false negative results.
For dairy herds, serological testing can also be performed on bulk tank milk.
As with individual diagnosis, a positive result will not indicate whether the bacteria is still circulating in the herd or whether it was present in the past but is no longer present. Finally, this technique should not be used in herds vaccinated against Q fever, as antibodies produced as a result of vaccination may be detected and cannot be distinguished from those resulting from infection.
Direct herd diagnosis has the advantage that the bacteria itself can be detected. A positive result therefore provides evidence of actual infection in the herd on the day of sampling. For dairy cattle or goat farms, the most interesting method is PCR on bulk tank milk. Indeed, this method is reliable and economically interesting. However, for dairy sheep farms, this technique is not feasible because, unlike cows and goats, many ewes, even if infected, do not shed the bacteria into the milk. A high proportion of false-negative results is therefore to be expected.
For non-dairy farms, regardless of the species, a reliable result can only be obtained by taking multiple vaginal swabs or faeces samples. This multiplies the costs of the analyses. An alternative, so far only validated for small ruminant farms, is the Coxiella burnetii diagnosis on dust collected in the stables.
Epidemiological diagnosis can be seen as an extension of herd diagnosis. Consequently, two methods can be considered:
The table below summarises the different contexts and possible methods:
|
Individual |
Herd |
Epidemiological study |
|||
Abortion |
Others |
Dairy cows and goats |
Others |
Dairy cows and goats |
Others |
|
Direct (PCR) |
+++ |
- |
+++ (BTM) |
+/- (Several samples needed) |
++ (BTM) |
- |
Indirect (Serology) |
- |
+/- |
+ |
+ |
++ |
++ |