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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Fecal coronavirus shedding and gene changes in cats treated for FIP

By Meli, Marina L et al.·Published in Viruses·2022·Department of Clinical Diagnostics and Services·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Fecal Feline Coronavirus RNA Shedding and Spike Gene Mutations in Cats with Feline Infectious Peritonitis Treated with GS-441524.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of cats diagnosed with feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) were treated with an oral medication called GS-441524, which has been shown to cure this serious disease. Most of the treated cats stopped shedding the virus in their feces within six days of starting treatment, although one cat did shed the virus again after 83 days. The treatment effectively reduced the amount of virus in their bodies, but some companion cats living with them also shed the virus, indicating that re-exposure can happen. Overall, GS-441524 was successful in managing the viral load in the treated cats.

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Abstract

As previously demonstrated by our research group, the oral multicomponent drug Xraphconncontaining GS-441524 was effective at curing otherwise fatal feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) in 18 feline coronavirus (FCoV)-infected cats. The aims of the current study were to investigate, using samples from the same animals as in the previous study, (1) the effect of treatment on fecal viral RNA shedding; (2) the presence of spike gene mutations in different body compartments of these cats; and (3) viral RNA shedding, presence of spike gene mutations, and anti-FCoV antibody titers in samples of 12 companion cats cohabitating with the treated cats. Eleven of the eighteen treated FIP cats (61%) were shedding FCoV RNA in feces within the first three days after treatment initiation, but all of them tested negative by day 6. In one of these cats, fecal shedding reoccurred on day 83. Two cats initially negative in feces were transiently positive 1-4 weeks into the study. The remaining five cats never shed FCoV. Viral RNA loads in feces decreased with time comparable with those in blood and effusion. Specific spike gene mutations linked to systemic FCoV spread were consistently found in blood and effusion from treated FIP cats, but not in feces from treated or companion cats. A new mutation that led to a not yet described amino acid change was identified, indicating that further mutations may be involved in the development of FIP. Eight of the twelve companion cats shed FCoV in feces. All but one of the twelve companion cats had anti-FCoV antibodies. Oral treatment with GS-441524 effectively decreased viral RNA loads in feces, blood, and effusion in cats with FIP. Nonetheless, re-shedding can most likely occur if cats are re-exposed to FCoV by their companion cats.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35632813/