Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
New Nobivac L4 vaccine protects dogs from leptospirosis infection
By Klaasen, H L B M et al.Ā·Published in The Veterinary recordĀ·2013Ā·Department of Microbiological R&D, NetherlandsĀ·View original on PubMed ā
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Original publication title: A novel tetravalent Leptospira bacterin protects against infection and shedding following challenge in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs was vaccinated with a new leptospirosis vaccine called Nobivac L4, which protects against four strains of the bacteria that cause this disease. After vaccination, these dogs were exposed to the bacteria, and the results showed that the vaccine effectively prevented infection and shedding of the bacteria in both young puppies and older dogs. This means that the vaccine can help keep dogs safe from leptospirosis, even if they still have some immunity from their mothers. Overall, the vaccine showed strong protection and is recommended for dogs starting at six weeks of age.
People also search for: dog leptospirosis vaccine Ā· Nobivac L4 for puppies Ā· how to prevent leptospirosis in dogs
Abstract
Recent evidence based on the current epidemiological situation suggests that vaccines against canine leptospirosis in Europe should be directed against infection with Leptospira interrogans (sensu lato) serogroups Canicola, Icterohaemorrhagiae, Grippotyphosa and Australis. In the eight studies presented here, dogs were vaccinated with Nobivac L4 (MSD Animal Health), a new tetravalent inactivated vaccine containing antigen from four strains representing these four serogroups. The dogs were then challenged, together with unvaccinated control dogs, using heterologous strains from the same four serogroups. In four of the studies, pups without agglutinating antibodies against the four serogroups were vaccinated with Nobivac L4 vaccine. In a further four studies, Nobivac L4 vaccine was given 48 hours after administration of antiserum from vaccinated dogs designed to mimic the serological status of pups with maternally derived antibodies against these serogroups. In all eight studies, vaccine efficacy was assessed in terms of antibody response, clinical signs, fever, thrombocyte count, frequency of positive isolation of challenge organisms from blood, urine and kidney and frequency of interstitial nephritis. The results demonstrate that Nobivac L4 vaccine induces sterile immunity against leptospiraemia and renal infection with strains of serogroups Canicola, Icterohaemorrhagiae and Grippotyphosa, and induces sterile immunity against leptospiraemia with a strain of serogroup Australis. Since sterile immunity was achieved in pups pretreated with antiserum as well, it can be concluded that this vaccine is also likely to be efficacious in the face of maternally derived antibodies in pups from the age of six weeks.
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Search related cases āOriginal publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23180149/