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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How long does a 4-strain Leptospira vaccine protect dogs?

By Wilson, Stephen et al.·Published in Vaccine·2013·Zoetis·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Duration of immunity of a multivalent (DHPPi/L4R) canine vaccine against four Leptospira serovars.

Species:
dog
Canine leptospirosisStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of six-week-old puppies received a new vaccine designed to protect against leptospirosis, a serious infection caused by Leptospira bacteria. After two vaccinations, the puppies were tested a year later, and none showed signs of illness, while unvaccinated control dogs did. The vaccinated puppies developed strong immunity that lasted for at least a year, as they did not test positive for the bacteria after being exposed. This study suggests that the new vaccine is effective in keeping puppies safe from leptospirosis for an extended period.

People also search for: puppy leptospirosis vaccine · how long does leptospirosis vaccine last · signs of leptospirosis in dogs

Abstract

Despite effective vaccines against common Leptospira serovars, the development of new products with long duration of immunity is still important to protect dogs against leptospirosis. The results from four challenge studies performed one year after vaccination of dogs with a multivalent vaccine containing four Leptospira antigens are reported. Six week old dogs received two vaccinations, three weeks apart, and were challenged 367 days later. Clinical observations were recorded, while blood (culture, biochemistry and haematology), urine (culture) and liver and kidney (culture) samples were collected throughout the study or at necropsy. All control dogs remained seronegative until challenge, when they seroconverted. Antibody titres to Leptospira antigens were seen in vaccinated dogs 21 days after first vaccination and peaked three to six weeks after the second vaccination. Titres decreased in all studies over the following 12 months, until challenge when anamnestic responses were observed. In all studies control dogs demonstrated various abnormal clinical signs, while no vaccinated dogs were affected; differences between groups were only significant following L. bratislava challenge. Analysis of blood cultures showed all control and five of the 24 vaccinated dogs were Leptospira positive after challenge; all studies showed significant differences between treatment groups in mean number of days with positive cultures. Significant differences between vaccinated and control groups in mean number of days with positive urine cultures were also observed, with all non-vaccinated and one vaccinated dog Leptospira positive. The urine culture positive vaccinated dog also gave positive culture from kidney and liver samples. All except one control dog also showed positive Leptospira isolation from kidney or liver, with significant differences between vaccinated and control groups observed. The results demonstrate that administration of a new vaccine to six week old puppies induces immunity which is still effective up to one year later as demonstrated by challenge.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23707443/