Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Minocycline vs doxycycline for treating heartworm in dogs
By Mark G. Papich·Published in Parasites & Vectors·2017·Department of Molecular Biomedical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, GB·View original on DOAJ →
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Original publication title: Considerations for using minocycline vs doxycycline for treatment of canine heartworm disease
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study looked at using minocycline as an alternative to doxycycline for treating heartworm disease in dogs. Doxycycline is the standard treatment because it helps reduce harmful bacteria that live with heartworms, but minocycline might be a good substitute if doxycycline isn't available. Research suggests that minocycline could be more effective than doxycycline, and it may be easier for dogs to absorb. However, more research is needed to confirm how well minocycline works for heartworm treatment in dogs.
People also search for: dog heartworm treatment options · doxycycline for heartworm disease · minocycline for dogs heartworm
Abstract
Abstract Background Doxycycline has been considered the first drug of choice for treating Wolbachia, a member of the Rickettsiaceae, which has a symbiotic relationship with filarial worms, including heartworms. Wolbachia, is susceptible to tetracyclines, which have been used as adjunctive treatments for heartworm disease. Treatment with doxycycline reduces Wolbachia numbers in all stages of heartworms and improves outcomes and decreased microfilaremia in dogs treated for heartworm disease. The American Heartworm Society recommends treatment with doxycycline in dogs diagnosed with heartworm disease at a dose of 10 mg/kg twice daily for 28 days. If doxycycline is not available, minocycline can be considered as a substitute. However, minocycline has not undergone an evaluation in dogs with heartworm disease, nor has an effective dose been established. Minocycline is an attractive option because of the higher cost of doxycycline and new pharmacokinetic information for dogs that provides guidance for appropriate dosage regimens to achieve pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) targets. Results Published reports from the Anti-Wolbachia Consortium (A-WOL) indicate superior in vitro activity of minocycline over doxycycline. Studies performed in mouse models to measure anti-Wolbachia activity showed that minocycline was 1.7 times more effective than doxycycline, despite a 3-fold lower pharmacokinetic exposure. To achieve the same exposure as achieved in the mouse infection model, a pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) analysis was conducted to determine optimal dosages for dogs. The analysis showed that an oral minocycline dose of 3.75 to 5 mg/kg administered twice daily would attain similar targets as observed in mice and predicted for human infections. Conclusions There are potentially several advantages for use of minocycline in animals. It is well absorbed from oral administration, it has less protein binding than doxycycline (65% vs 92%) allowing for better distribution into tissue, and it is approximately two times more lipophilic than doxycycline, which may result in better intracellular penetration. More work is needed to document efficacy of minocycline for treating canine heartworm disease.
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Search related cases →Original publication on DOAJ: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13071-017-2449-1