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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Famciclovir oral treatment reduces herpesvirus symptoms in cats

By Thomasy, Sara M et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2011·School of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Evaluation of orally administered famciclovir in cats experimentally infected with feline herpesvirus type-1.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of 16 cats infected with feline herpesvirus type-1 (FHV-1) were treated with an oral medication called famciclovir to see if it could help their symptoms. The cats that received famciclovir showed less severe disease, gained weight, and had fewer signs of eye problems compared to those that received a placebo. By the end of the study, the famciclovir-treated cats had better overall health and less viral shedding. This suggests that famciclovir can be an effective treatment for cats suffering from FHV-1 infections, although additional treatments may still be needed for complete recovery.

People also search for: cat herpesvirus treatment · famciclovir for cats · feline herpes symptoms · cat eye problems treatment

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate orally administered famciclovir for treatment of cats with experimentally induced disease attributable to feline herpesvirus type-1 (FHV-1). ANIMALS: 16 nonvaccinated specific-pathogen-free cats. PROCEDURES: Cats were treated orally with famciclovir (90 mg/kg; n = 10) or a similar volume of lactose (400 mg; 6) 3 times/d for 21 days. Cats were inoculated with FHV-1 and administered the first treatment dose on day 0. Disease score; weight; results of urinalysis, serum biochemical analysis, and CBC; histologic conjunctivitis score; herpetic DNA shedding; goblet cell density; anti-FHV-1 antibody concentration; and plasma penciclovir concentration were measured. RESULTS: On days 4 to 18 following inoculation, disease scores were lower in famciclovir-treated cats than in lactose-treated cats. Lactose-treated cats decreased in weight during the first 7 days after inoculation, but famciclovir-treated cats increased in weight throughout the study. Percentage change in weight was greater in famciclovir-treated cats on days 7 and 14 than in lactose-treated cats. Serum globulin concentration was lower on days 3 through 9, conjunctivitis histologic score was lower on day 14, herpetic DNA was shed less frequently throughout the study, goblet cell density was greater on day 21, and circulating anti-FHV-1 antibody concentration at study end was lower in famciclovir-treated cats, compared with these measurements in lactose-treated cats. Approximate peak plasma penciclovir concentration was 2.0 μg/mL. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Famciclovir administration improved outcomes for systemic, ophthalmic, clinicopathologic, virologic, and histologic variables in cats experimentally infected with FHV-1. Adjunctive topical mucinomimetic and antimicrobial treatments may also be necessary.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21194340/