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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Oral moxidectin combo prevents heartworm disease in dogs

By Mitchell, Elizabeth et al.·Published in Research in veterinary science·2023·Boehringer Ingelheim Animal Health, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Efficacy of an oral combination of moxidectin, afoxolaner, and pyrantel pamoate for the prevention of heartworm disease in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of beagle dogs was tested to see if a new oral medication could prevent heartworm disease, which is caused by a parasite spread by mosquitoes. The dogs that received the medication showed 100% protection against heartworms, while the untreated dogs had live heartworms found in them after the study period. In a separate field study with client-owned dogs, none of the dogs developed heartworm infection after receiving the medication monthly for a year. This suggests that this combination treatment is highly effective in preventing heartworm disease in dogs.

People also search for: dog heartworm prevention medication · beagle heartworm treatment · how to prevent heartworm in dogs

Abstract

Dirofilaria immitis, the mosquito-borne agent of dirofilariosis, a chronic and sometimes fatal cardiopulmonary canine disease, is endemic in most warm and temperate regions in the world. The efficacy of an oral endectoparasiticide product (test product or TP) combining moxidectin, afoxolaner, and pyrantel pamoate was evaluated for the prevention of heartworm disease in dogs, in two laboratory and one field studies. In each laboratory study, 20 D. immitis-na&#xef;ve beagle dogs were experimentally infected with D. immitis. Ten control dogs were sham-treated, and ten dogs were administered the TP targeting the minimum effective dose, six times monthly and starting 30&#xa0;days post infection. At necropsy seven months after inoculations, no heartworms were found in any of the TP treated dog, whereas 19 to 42 live heartworms were found in the control dogs. In each study, treatment efficacy was 100% and the difference between treated and untreated groups was highly significant (p&#xa0;<&#xa0;0.0001). A field study was conducted through the full transmission season in several heartworm-endemic regions of the United States. One hundred and twenty client-owned dogs that were negative for D. immitis at enrollment were administered twelve monthly oral doses of the TP at label dose. Blood tests for D. immitis antigen and modified Knott's tests for microfilariae remained negative through the full duration of the study, demonstrating that all dogs were protected from heartworm infection during the full transmission season. These studies demonstrated that TP administered monthly for at least six doses is effective at preventing dirofilariosis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37454406/