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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Treatment of cat gut worm infections with Bravecto Plus spot-on

By Rohdich, Nadja et al.·Published in Parasites & vectors·2018·MSD Animal Health Innovation GmbH, Germany·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A randomized, blinded, controlled, multi-centered field study assessing the treatment of gastrointestinal nematode infections in cats with fluralaner plus moxidectin spot-on solution (Bravecto® Plus).

Species:
cat
Stomach & digestionCats

Plain-English summary

A group of cats with gastrointestinal worm infections were treated with a spot-on solution containing fluralaner and moxidectin (Bravecto Plus) to see how well it worked compared to another treatment. Most of the cats had a common type of worm called Toxocara cati. After treatment, nearly all the cats receiving fluralaner and moxidectin were free of worm eggs in their feces, showing it was very effective. This treatment not only helped eliminate the worms but also provided protection against fleas and ticks for 12 weeks. Both treatments were safe and well-tolerated by the cats.

People also search for: cat worm treatment · Bravecto Plus for cats · Toxocara cati symptoms in cats

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A spot-on formulation containing fluralaner (280 mg/ml) plus moxidectin (14 mg/ml) (Bravecto® Plus) was developed for the treatment of nematode infections as well as providing 12 weeks of protection against insect and acarine parasites in cats. The effectiveness and safety of this product against feline gastrointestinal nematodes was assessed in naturally-infested, client-owned cats under field conditions in Albania, Bulgaria, Germany and Hungary. METHODS: To be eligible for enrollment in this investigator-blinded study cats had to be at least 10 weeks-old, weigh at least 1.2 kg, be clinically healthy, and have a faecal sample testing positive for nematodes no more than eight days prior to treatment. Cats were stratified into blocks of three in order of presentation at each center and randomly allocated in a 2:1 ratio to be treated topically on Day 0 with fluralaner plus moxidectin (minimum dose rates 40 mg/kg and 2 mg/kg, respectively) or emodepside plus praziquantel (minimum dose rates 3 mg/kg and 12 mg/kg, respectively) (Profender®). Faecal samples were collected from cats prior to treatment and 14 ± 4 days later. RESULTS: There were 182 cats randomized to the fluralaner plus moxidectin group, and 91 to the emodepside plus praziquantel group. Prior to treatment the most commonly identified nematode egg was Toxocara cati, found in 79.1 and 82.4% of cats in the fluralaner plus moxidectin and emodepside plus praziquantel groups, respectively. Eggs of Toxascaris leonina were found in 8.2 and 6.6% of cats; of hookworms in 30.8 and 24.2%; and of Capillaria spp. in 7.1 and 4.3%, respectively. After treatment, faecal samples from 98.3% of fluralaner plus moxidectin treated and 96.6% of emodepside plus praziquantel-treated cats were free of nematode ova. Geometric mean faecal egg count reductions for T. cati, the only eggs found in post-treatment faecal samples, were 99.97% and 99.93%, respectively. Treatment with fluralaner plus moxidectin was non-inferior to emodepside plus praziquantel. Both products were safe and well tolerated by cats treated under field conditions. CONCLUSIONS: This field study confirms that, in addition to 12-week extended duration flea and tick control, fluralaner plus moxidectin provides broad spectrum treatment of nematodes in cats.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30449275/