New guidelines offer a global framework for evaluating ASF vaccines, balancing safety, surveillance, and trade concerns.

In July 2025, the World Organization for Animal Health (WOAH) released its first guidelines for evaluating African swine fever (ASF) vaccines in the field.
These guidelines follow WOAH’s May 2025 adoption of an international standard for ASF vaccines—a milestone that formally recognizes their role in disease control.
This laid the foundation for harmonized regulation and prompted countries to seek practical guidance on how to use and assess the vaccines in the field. In response, WOAH convened a panel of global experts to develop a science-based evaluation framework.
Recently, the Swine Health Information Center summarized the key points of the guidelines.
Core considerations for field evaluation
The new WOAH guidelines outline key scientific and regulatory factors that should be addressed before ASF vaccines are deployed or assessed in the field:
Limited field use to date
When the guidelines were drafted, only Vietnam and the Philippines had approved ASF vaccine use in the field.
Both countries restrict use to pigs over 10 weeks old, destined for slaughter. Since they are net pork importers, their trade exposure is limited.
WOAH’s guidelines provide a structured approach for countries considering using an ASF vaccine. They help balance potential benefits with scientific uncertainty and trade implications.
As ASF vaccine science evolves, producers and veterinarians must stay informed. Field protocols and evaluation standards will continue to shift.
Subscribe now to the technical pig magazine
AUTHORS

Bifet Gracia Farm & Nedap – Automated feeding in swine nurseries

The importance of Water on pig farms
Fernando Laguna Arán
Microbiota & Intestinal Barrier Integrity – Keys to Piglet Health
Alberto Morillo Alujas
Impact of Reducing Antibiotic use, the Dutch experience
Ron Bergevoet
The keys to successful Lactation in hyperprolific sows
Mercedes Sebastián Lafuente
Addressing the challenge of Management in Transition
Víctor Fernández Segundo
Dealing with the rise of Swine Dysentery
Roberto M. C. Guedes
Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae – What are we dealing with?
Marcelo Gottschalk
The new era of Animal Welfare in Pig Production – Are we ready?
Antonio Velarde
Gut health in piglets – What can we do to measure and improve it?
Alberto Morillo Alujas
Interview with Cristina Massot – Animal Health in Europe after April 2021
Cristina Massot
Differential diagnosis of respiratory processes in pigs
Desirée Martín Jurado Gema Chacón Pérez