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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

New DHPPi/L4R vaccine stops leptospirosis infection and symptoms

By Wilson, Stephen et al.·Published in Vaccine·2013·Zoetis·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A new multivalent (DHPPi/L4R) canine combination vaccine prevents infection, shedding and clinical signs following experimental challenge with four Leptospira serovars.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of six-week-old puppies received a new combination vaccine designed to protect against four types of Leptospira bacteria, which can cause serious illness. After two vaccinations, the puppies were exposed to these bacteria, and while the non-vaccinated puppies showed signs of illness and tested positive for the bacteria in their blood and urine, the vaccinated puppies remained healthy and free of infection. The vaccine successfully triggered an immune response, providing protection against the disease. This suggests that the new vaccine is effective in preventing Leptospira infections in dogs.

People also search for: puppy vaccination for Leptospira · dog leptospirosis symptoms · Leptospira vaccine effectiveness in dogs

Abstract

Although effective vaccines have been developed against the common Leptospira serovars, they are still reported in clinical cases, while others are increasingly prevalent. The results from four challenge studies following vaccination of dogs with a new combination vaccine (DHPPi/L4R) containing inactivated L. serovars, L. canicola, L. icterohaemorrhagiae, L. bratislava and L. grippotyphosa conducted to satisfy the requirements of the European Pharmacopoeia monograph (01/2008:0447), are reported. Six week old dogs received two vaccinations, three weeks apart, and were challenged 25 days later with different isolates of the L. serovars. Clinical observations were recorded, and blood, urine and tissue samples were collected for analysis. Following challenge, non-vaccinated dogs demonstrated various clinical signs, while no vaccinated dogs were affected; significant differences in mean clinical scores were observed. Measurable antibody titres to each Leptospira antigen were seen in vaccinated dogs 21 days following the first vaccination, with further increases in antibody titres observed following challenge with the respective Leptospira strain. Non-vaccinated dogs remained seronegative until challenge. Leptospira were re-isolated from the blood, urine, kidney and liver of all non-vaccinated dogs following challenge. In contrast no vaccinated dogs had Leptospira re-isolated from the same tissues. Significant differences were seen in number of days with positive isolation (blood and urine) and in number of dogs with positive samples (kidney and liver). In conclusion, vaccination of dogs with the new vaccine induces protective immunity 25 days after second vaccination with protection against infection, renal infection and clinical signs following challenge.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23707447/