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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Feline immunodeficiency virus in pet cats in Australia and New Zealand

By Westman, M E et al.·Published in Australian veterinary journal·2022·Sydney School of Veterinary Science, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) infection in domestic pet cats in Australia and New Zealand: Guidelines for diagnosis, prevention and management.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A study highlighted the importance of keeping pet cats safe from feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), which can affect their health and lifespan. It recommends that all cats should be kept indoors or in secure outdoor areas to minimize exposure to FIV. Testing for FIV is crucial, especially for cats that might come into contact with infected animals, and there are reliable tests available in Australia and New Zealand. While there is a vaccine for FIV, it is not 100% effective, so vaccinated cats should be tested annually. For cats that do contract FIV, good care and early treatment of any other health issues can help improve their quality of life.

People also search for: cat FIV symptoms · how to prevent FIV in cats · indoor cat safety · FIV vaccination for cats · caring for FIV-positive cats

Abstract

Despite the passage of over 30 years since its discovery, the importance of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) on the health and longevity of infected domestic cats is hotly debated amongst feline experts. Notwithstanding the absence of good quality information, Australian and New Zealand (NZ) veterinarians should aim to minimise the exposure of cats to FIV. The most reliable way to achieve this goal is to recommend that all pet cats are kept exclusively indoors, or with secure outdoor access (e.g., cat enclosures, secure gardens), with FIV testing of any in-contact cats. All animal holding facilities should aim to individually house adult cats to limit the spread of FIV infection in groups of animals that are stressed and do not have established social hierarchies. Point-of-care (PoC) FIV antibody tests are available in Australia and NZ that can distinguish FIV-infected and uninfected FIV-vaccinated cats (Witness™ and Anigen Rapid™). Although testing of whole blood, serum or plasma remains the gold standard for FIV diagnosis, PoC testing using saliva may offer a welfare-friendly alternative in the future. PCR testing to detect FIV infection is not recommended as a screening procedure since a negative PCR result does not rule out FIV infection and is only recommended in specific scenarios. Australia and NZ are two of three countries where a dual subtype FIV vaccine (Fel-O-Vax® FIV) is available and offers a further avenue for disease prevention. Since FIV vaccination only has a reported field effectiveness of 56% in Australia, and possibly lower in NZ, FIV-vaccinated cats should undergo annual FIV testing prior to annual FIV re-vaccination using a suitable PoC kit to check infection has not occurred in the preceding year. With FIV-infected cats, clinicians should strive to be even more thorough than usual at detecting early signs of disease. The most effective way to enhance the quality of life and life expectancy of FIV-infected cats is to optimise basic husbandry and to treat any concurrent conditions early in the disease course. Currently, no available drugs are registered for the treatment of FIV infection. Critically, the euthanasia of healthy FIV-infected cats, and sick FIV-infected cats without appropriate clinical investigations, should not occur.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35578381/