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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cats with blood disorders testing positive for FeLV by antibody

By Kornya, Matthew et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2023·Department of Clinical Studies, Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Discordant FeLV p27 immunoassay and PCR test results in 21 cats with hematologic disorders.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of 21 cats with blood disorders tested positive for feline leukemia virus (FeLV) using a common test, but later showed negative results for the virus's DNA in their blood. Most of these cats had other serious health issues, like autoimmune diseases or infections, which can mimic FeLV. Despite the initial positive test, about 86% of these cats were able to go home from the vet, and many survived for several months to years after treatment. This suggests that if a cat tests positive for FeLV but has other health problems, further testing for the virus's DNA is important to confirm the diagnosis.

People also search for: cat leukemia test results · feline leukemia virus symptoms · cat blood disorder treatment

Abstract

CASE SERIES SUMMARY: A total of 1692 medical records from a primary care feline practice and a veterinary referral hospital were evaluated retrospectively to assess discordant feline leukemia virus (FeLV) test results. In total, 73 cats were positive for FeLV using serum in a lateral flow immunoassay (LFI) or laboratory-based ELISA. Of these cats, 21 subsequently tested negative for FeLV proviral DNA by non-quantitative PCR on EDTA whole blood (16/21, 76.2%), bone marrow (4/21, 19%) or both (1/21, 4.7%). The proportional morbidity (an estimate of prevalence in a sample of the total population) for FeLV by LFI/ELISA and PCR assays was 3.1%, consistent with that reported in previous studies for cats in North America. Cats with discordant LFI/ELISA and PCR results had either primary bone marrow disease (18 autoimmune, one neoplastic), a bone marrow insult (hemotrophic mycoplasmosis) or systemic inflammation (pyothorax with a marked neutrophilic leukocytosis). The percentage of cats with a positive LFA/ELISA result and negative PCR assay surviving to discharge was 85.7% (18/21). Of these, 88.9% (16/18) survived 4 months to 6 years. Seven cats (33.3%) were re-tested with LFI or ELISA once primary disease was controlled, and all tested negative. RELEVANCE AND NOVEL INFORMATION: These findings indicate that in cats with bone marrow disease that shares features of progressive FeLV infection, positive LFI and ELISA FeLV test results should be followed up with FeLV proviral DNA PCR testing, particularly in populations where disease prevalence is low.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37439634/