Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Topical fluralaner controls fleas on cats and dogs for 12 weeks
By Ranjan, Sivaja et al.·Published in Parasites & vectors·2018·Merck Animal Health, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: A single topical fluralaner application to cats and to dogs controls fleas for 12 weeks in a simulated home environment.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs and cats were treated with a topical flea treatment called fluralaner (Bravecto) to see how well it worked against fleas. After one application, the pets were monitored for 12 weeks, and the results showed that the treatment was very effective, keeping fleas away almost completely during that time. Only a couple of fleas were found on a few pets shortly after treatment, but overall, the fluralaner worked well without causing any side effects. This means that a single application can help keep your pet flea-free for three months.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fluralaner (Bravecto®, Merck Animal Health, Madison, NJ, USA) is a novel isoxazoline that provides up to 12 weeks flea and tick control when administered orally to dogs. Two assessor-blinded studies, one in dogs, the other in cats evaluated the sustained efficacy of a topical fluralaner formulation against fleas in a simulated home environment (SHE). METHODS: Animals were ranked and blocked into groups of two using flea counts completed 24 hours following Ctenocephalides felis infestations placed on dogs on Day -64, and on cats on Day -36. Within blocks animals were randomized to a treatment group, 10 animals per group, one group to receive fluralaner spot-on (minimum dose rate for dogs, 25 mg/kg; for cats, 40 mg/kg), the other to be a sham-treated control. Animals were then placed into their SHE, one animal per pen or cage and then infested with 100 C. felis at weekly intervals. Dogs were infested from Day -56 through -21 and cats on Days -28 and -21. Fleas were counted and removed from each dog and cat on Day -1. Study animals were then held in clean pens/cages until treatment on Day 0. One day later, after treatment, all animals were returned to their home environment (SHE). Additional 50-flea challenges were placed on each animal on Days 22, 50 and 78. Fleas were counted and replaced on all animals on Day 1 and weekly thereafter for 12 weeks. RESULTS: Arithmetic mean counts in control-group animals exceeded 10 fleas at all post-treatment assessments except on Days 1, 7 and 14. All control-group animals remained infested at each assessment from Day or 28 through Day 84, thereby validating the challenge methodology. Fluralaner efficacy was 100% on all occasions except for 2 fleas found on 1 dog on Day 1, and 3 fleas on 1 dog on Day 14. One flea was recovered from 1 fluralaner treated cat on Day 1. There were no treatment-related adverse events. CONCLUSION: A single application of a topical formulation of fluralaner is well tolerated and highly effective in the prevention of flea infestations of dogs and cats throughout the 12 weeks following treatment.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29970135/