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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Immunotherapy with FML vaccine helps dogs with visceral leishmaniasis

By Borja-Cabrera, Gulnara Patricia et al.·Published in Vaccine·2004·"Prof. Paulo de G&#xf3, Brazil·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Effective immunotherapy against canine visceral leishmaniasis with the FML-vaccine.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with leishmaniasis, a serious disease caused by parasites, were treated with a new vaccine called the FML-vaccine. Five dogs that were showing symptoms improved after receiving the vaccine, and three of them remained healthy and free of parasites a year later. In a larger group of 21 dogs that were asymptomatic but infected, 90% stayed healthy and parasite-free for over 22 months after vaccination. In contrast, many untreated dogs in a control group unfortunately did not survive. This study suggests that the FML-vaccine could be a promising option for treating dogs with leishmaniasis.

People also search for: dog leishmaniasis vaccine · FML vaccine for dogs · treating leishmaniasis in dogs

Abstract

The potential effect of the fucose mannose ligand (FML)-vaccine on immunotherapy of canine visceral leishmaniasis was assayed on five mongrel dogs experimentally infected with Leishmania donovani and on 21 Leishmania chagasi naturally infected dogs when seropositive to FML but completely asymptomatic. The clinical signs of the experimentally infected, symptomatic dogs only disappeared after the complete vaccination. Protection was obtained in 3/5 animals that remained asymptomatic, IDR positive and parasite free, 1 year after infection. Furthermore, the asymptomatic, FML-vaccine treated dogs showed stable anti-FML IgG1 levels, increasing IgG2 levels and 79-95% of positive DTH response, during the whole experiment. Twenty-two months after complete vaccination, no obits due to visceral leishmaniasis were recorded and 90% of these dogs were still asymptomatic, healthy and parasite free. On the other hand, 37% (17/46 dogs) kala-azar obits were recorded in a control group that received no treatment during the same period, and that was FML-seropositive and asymtpomatic at the beginning of the assay. Our results indicate that the FML-vaccine was effective in the immunotherapy against visceral leishmaniasis of asymptomatic infected dogs. Normal proportions of CD4 and CD21 lymphocytes were detected in PBMC by FACS analysis, in dogs submitted to immunotherapy, suggesting their non-infectious condition. All animals showed as well significantly increased percents of CD8 lymphocytes as expected for Quillaja saponin (QuilA) vaccine treatments.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15149782/