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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Short-term rapamycin treatment effects in middle-aged dogs

By Urfer, Silvan R et al.·Published in GeroScience·2017·Department of Pathology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A randomized controlled trial to establish effects of short-term rapamycin treatment in 24 middle-aged companion dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 24 middle-aged dogs received either a placebo or a low dose of rapamycin, a drug that may help improve heart function, for 10 weeks. The dogs were regularly checked for any side effects, and none were found in those taking rapamycin. Tests showed that the dogs on rapamycin had better heart function measures compared to those on the placebo. While some blood test results changed slightly, they remained within normal limits. The researchers plan to study rapamycin further with more dogs to see if it can help them live healthier, longer lives.

People also search for: dog heart health treatment · rapamycin for dogs · improving heart function in dogs

Abstract

Age is the single greatest risk factor for most causes of morbidity and mortality in humans and their companion animals. As opposed to other model organisms used to study aging, dogs share the human environment, are subject to similar risk factors, receive comparable medical care, and develop many of the same age-related diseases humans do. In this study, 24 middle-aged healthy dogs received either placebo or a non-immunosuppressive dose of rapamycin for 10 weeks. All dogs received clinical and hematological exams before, during, and after the trial and echocardiography before and after the trial. Our results showed no clinical side effects in the rapamycin-treated group compared to dogs receiving the placebo. Echocardiography suggested improvement in both diastolic and systolic age-related measures of heart function (E/A ratio, fractional shortening, and ejection fraction) in the rapamycin-treated dogs. Hematological values remained within the normal range for all parameters studied; however, the mean corpuscular volume (MCV) was decreased in rapamycin-treated dogs. Based on these results, we will test rapamycin on a larger dog cohort for a longer period of time in order to validate its effects on cardiac function and to determine whether it can significantly improve healthspan and reduce mortality in companion dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28374166/