Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Oral sarolaner (Simparica) kills four tick types on dogs in Europe
By Geurden, Thomas et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2016·Zoetis·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Efficacy of a novel oral formulation of sarolaner (Simparica™) against four common tick species infesting dogs in Europe.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of Beagle dogs in Europe was treated with an oral medication called sarolaner (Simparica) to see how well it worked against common tick infestations. After just one dose, the dogs showed a remarkable 100% effectiveness in getting rid of ticks within 48 hours, except for one type of tick, where it was still 99.7% effective. The treatment also provided strong protection against new tick infestations for at least 35 days. No side effects were reported, making sarolaner a safe and effective option for tick control in dogs.
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Abstract
The efficacy of single oral treatment of sarolaner (Simparica™, Zoetis), a novel isoxazoline compound, was evaluated against four tick species known to commonly infest dogs in Europe. Eight laboratory studies were conducted using adult purpose-bred Beagle dogs. In each study, 16 animals were randomly allocated to one of two treatment groups based on pre-treatment host-suitability tick counts. Dogs were infested with 50 unfed adult Dermacentor reticulatus (two studies), Ixodes hexagonus (three studies), Ixodes ricinus (two studies) or Rhipicephalus sanguineus (one study) ticks on Days -2, 5, 12, 19, 26 and 33. On Day 0, dogs were treated orally with placebo or sarolaner tablets providing the minimum dose of 2.0mg/kg bodyweight and tick counts were conducted 48h after treatment and after each subsequent weekly re-infestation. There were no treatment-related adverse reactions in any of the studies. Dogs in the placebo-treated group maintained tick infestations throughout the studies. Geometric mean live tick counts were significantly (P≤0.0001) lower in the sarolaner-treated group compared to the tick counts in the placebo group at all time-points. A single oral administration of sarolaner resulted in 100% efficacy against existing infestations of all tick species except R. sanguineus, for which the efficacy was 99.7%, within 48h. Efficacy against weekly re-infestations was ≥97.5% for all tick species for 35 days. Thus, a single dose of sarolaner administered orally at the minimum dosage of 2 mg/kg, resulted in ≥99.7% efficacy within 48h against existing tick infestations, and in ≥97.5% efficacy against weekly re-infestations, for at least 35 days after treatment. These studies confirmed that administration of the minimum dose of sarolaner will provide treatment of existing infestations and give at least one month of control against re-infestation by the common tick species affecting dogs in Europe.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27068640/