Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Topical fipronil vs oral spinosad flea treatment in dogs
By Beugnet, F et al.·Published in Parasite (Paris, France)·2011·Merial SAS, France·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Comparative efficacy on dogs of a single topical treatment with the pioneer fipronil/(S)-methoprene and an oral treatment with spinosad against Ctenocephalides felis.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs was treated with either a topical flea treatment (fipronil/(S)-methoprene) or an oral flea treatment (spinosad) to see which worked better against fleas. The dogs treated with the topical product remained completely flea-free throughout the study, while the oral treatment showed variable results, with some dogs still having fleas and producing eggs after a few weeks. The topical treatment proved to be consistently effective, while the oral treatment's effectiveness decreased over time. Pet owners can feel confident using the topical treatment for long-lasting flea prevention.
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Abstract
In the study reported here, the pioneer fipronil/(S)-methoprene topical product (Frontline® Plus, Merial Limited, Duluth, GA) was compared to the oral spinosad product (Comfortis® Elanco, Greenfield, IN) for efficacy against adult fleas and preventing egg production. The product presentations, doses and labelling were the one applicable in the USA. Using a standard protocol, 200 cat fleas of mixed sex were applied to dogs on Days 1, 7, 14, 21, 28, 35, and 42. Dogs were combed to remove fleas 24 hours post-infestation, the fleas were counted, collected, and then reapplied to each dog following completion of their respective count. At 48 hours post-infestation, comb counts were performed and fleas were removed. No fleas were collected from any dog in the fipronil/(S)-methoprene group at any 24 or 48 hours post-infestation assessment throughout the six weeks study, yielding a preventive efficacy of 100%. For the spinosad treatment, efficacy was 100% at 24 hours and 48 hours through Day 16, and thereafter declined. The results observed in the spinosad-treated dogs were highly variable between animals. At the 24 and 48 hours counts following the Day 21 infestation, only five of eight spinosad-treated dogs (62.5%) were flea-free. Following the Day  28 infestation, spinosad efficacy fell to 85% and 89%, for the 24 hours and 48 hours counts, and only two dogs (25%) were flea free, compared to 100% flea-free dogs in the fipronil/(S)-methoprene group. No fleas were collected from the fipronil/(S)-methoprene treated dogs throughout the entire study, therefore, no eggs were collected at any time from any dog in the group. However, in the spinosad group adult fleas were found on dogs starting on Day 21 and by Day 30, 42 eggs were collected from one dog that had 107 adult fleas counted at 48 hours. At Day 37 and Day 49, more than 100 eggs were collected from each dog in the spinosad-treated and control groups.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22091463/