Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Sarolaner (Simparica) flea treatment safe and effective for dogs in US
By Cherni, Judith A et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2016·Zoetis, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Efficacy and safety of sarolaner (Simparica™) against fleas on dogs presented as veterinary patients in the United States.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs was treated with a new flea medication called sarolaner (Simparica) to see how well it worked against fleas and related skin issues. The study included 479 dogs, and the results showed that sarolaner reduced flea counts by over 99% within just 14 days, leading to a quick improvement in symptoms of flea allergy dermatitis (FAD). Most dogs accepted the chewable tablets easily, and there were no serious side effects reported. Overall, sarolaner was found to be safe and effective for controlling fleas and alleviating skin problems in dogs.
People also search for: dog flea treatment · Simparica for dogs · flea allergy dermatitis in dogs
Abstract
The efficacy and safety of a novel isoxazoline parasiticide, sarolaner (Simparica™), for the control of fleas on dogs was evaluated in a randomized, controlled clinical study conducted in 19 general veterinary practices throughout the United States. Four hundred and seventy nine (479) dogs from 293 households were enrolled. Each household was randomly assigned to treatment with either sarolaner oral tablets (Simparica™, Zoetis) at the proposed label dose or an approved comparator product at the label dose (spinosad, Comfortis(®), Elanco). Dogs were dosed by their owners at home on Day 0 and on approximately Days 30 and 60. Dogs were examined at the clinics for general health, flea and tick infestation, and clinical signs of flea allergy dermatitis (FAD) at the initial visit and Days 14, 30, 60 and 90. Blood was collected for clinical pathology at screening and Day 90. Sarolaner was well-accepted by dogs with the majority of flavored chewable tablets (91.5%) accepted free choice, by hand or in food. Geometric mean live flea counts were reduced by >99% at the first time measured (14 days) after initiation of treatment and continued to reduce through the study. Treatment success (proportion of dogs with ≥90% reduction in fleas) for the sarolaner-treated dogs was superior to that for spinosad-treated dogs at Days 14 and 30 and non-inferior on Days 60 and 90 (P≤0.025) The rapid reduction in flea infestations resulted in a similar rapid resolution of the clinical signs associated with FAD. Sarolaner chewable tablets were well tolerated with no treatment related adverse reactions. Most of the clinical signs reported were consistent with allergies and dermatitis or sporadic occurrences of conditions commonly observed in the general dog population. A wide variety of concomitant medications, including many commercially available heartworm preventatives and other anthelmintic drugs, were administered to study dogs and all were well tolerated. Sarolaner administered orally to provide a minimum dosage of 2.0mg/kg (range 2-4mg/kg) once monthly for three consecutive treatments was safe and effective in the treatment and prevention of natural infestations of fleas and resulted in a substantial improvement of clinical signs associated with FAD.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26947964/