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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

GS-441524 treatment for cats with feline infectious peritonitis

By Pedersen, Niels C et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2019·School of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Efficacy and safety of the nucleoside analog GS-441524 for treatment of cats with naturally occurring feline infectious peritonitis.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of cats diagnosed with feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) were treated with a medication called GS-441524 to see if it could help them recover. Out of 31 cats, 26 completed at least 12 weeks of treatment, and 18 of them remained healthy afterward. Some cats did experience relapses, but those that were treated again with either the same or a higher dose showed improvement. Overall, GS-441524 was found to be a safe and effective option for treating FIP, with many cats living healthy lives after treatment.

People also search for: cat FIP treatment GS-441524 · feline infectious peritonitis symptoms · cat medication for FIP

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to determine the safety and efficacy of the nucleoside analog GS-441524 for cats suffering from various forms of naturally acquired feline infectious peritonitis (FIP). METHODS: Cats ranged from 3.4-73 months of age (mean 13.6 months); 26 had effusive or dry-to-effusive FIP and five had non-effusive disease. Cats with severe neurological and ocular FIP were not recruited. The group was started on GS-441524 at a dosage of 2.0 mg/kg SC q24h for at least 12 weeks and increased when indicated to 4.0 mg/kg SC q24h. RESULTS: Four of the 31 cats that presented with severe disease died or were euthanized within 2-5 days and a fifth cat after 26 days. The 26 remaining cats completed the planned 12 weeks or more of treatment. Eighteen of these 26 cats remain healthy at the time of publication (OnlineFirst, February 2019) after one round of treatment, while eight others suffered disease relapses within 3-84 days. Six of the relapses were non-neurological and two neurological. Three of the eight relapsing cats were treated again at the same dosage, while five cats had the dosage increased from 2.0 to 4.0 mg/kg q24h. The five cats treated a second time at the higher dosage, including one with neurological disease, responded well and also remain healthy at the time of publication. However, one of the three cats re-treated at the original lower dosage relapsed with neurological disease and was euthanized, while the two remaining cats responded favorably but relapsed a second time. These two cats were successfully treated a third time at the higher dosage, producing 25 long-time survivors. One of the 25 successfully treated cats was subsequently euthanized due to presumably unrelated heart disease, while 24 remain healthy. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: GS-441524 was shown to be a safe and effective treatment for FIP. The optimum dosage was found to be 4.0 mg/kg SC q24h for at least 12 weeks.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30755068/