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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How long rabies vaccines protect dogs from rabies infection

By Dodds, W Jean et al.·Published in Canadian journal of veterinary research = Revue canadienne de recherche veterinaire·2020·Department of Pathobiological Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Duration of immunity after rabies vaccination in dogs: The Rabies Challenge Fund research study.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of research beagles was studied to find out how long they stay protected after getting rabies vaccinations. The goal was to see if the time between booster shots could be safely extended to 5 or 7 years, which could help reduce side effects from vaccines. After more than six years, about 80% of the vaccinated dogs survived when exposed to the rabies virus, showing that their immunity lasted longer than previously thought. The study found that even if a dog's antibody levels were low, they still had a memory response to the vaccine, meaning they could still fight off the virus effectively.

People also search for: how long does rabies vaccine last for dogs · rabies booster shot frequency · dog rabies vaccine side effects

Abstract

A prospective study of 65 research beagles kept in a rabies-free environment was undertaken to determine the duration of immunity after they received licensed rabies vaccines. The eventual goal was to extend mandated rabies booster intervals to 5 or 7 years and help reduce the risk of vaccine-associated adverse events. Three groups of dogs were vaccinated with 1 of 2 commercial rabies vaccines or saline at 12 and 15 weeks of age. Beginning 5 years 5 months later, vaccinated and unvaccinated dogs were challenged with virulent rabies virus and observed for 90 days over a series of 3 trials. Humoral and cellular immune responses were examined by serology and flow cytometry. Brain tissue from all challenged dogs was tested for rabies virus. Challenge trial 1 was confounded due to insufficiently virulent virus. In trials 2 and 3 virulent challenge provided 100% mortality in controls. Vaccinate survival was 80% (4/5) after 6 years 7 months, 50% (6/12) after 7 years 1 month, and 20% (1/5) after 8years 0 months. Antibody responses 12 days post-challenge correlated strongly with survival. In a separate non-challenge trial, administration of either a recombinant or a killed rabies vaccine demonstrated memory antibody responses 6 years 1 month after initial vaccination compared with unvaccinated controls. Our data demonstrated that i) duration of immunity to rabies in vaccinated dogs extends beyond 3 years; ii) immunologic memory exists even in vaccinated dogs with serum antibody titer < 0.1 IU/mL; and iii) non-adjuvanted recombinant rabies vaccine induces excellent antibody responses in previously vaccinated dogs 14 days after administration.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32255911/