Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Importation of macrocyclic lactone resistant cyathostomins on a US thoroughbred farm.
- Journal:
- International journal for parasitology. Drugs and drug resistance
- Year:
- 2020
- Authors:
- Nielsen, M K et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Veterinary Science · United States
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
This study looked at a group of Thoroughbred yearlings that were brought from Ireland to the US in 2019 and found that they had a resistance to a type of deworming medication called macrocyclic lactones (ML). When the horses were treated with ivermectin, a common dewormer, the reduction in parasite eggs was much lower in the imported horses compared to US-bred yearlings. After trying different treatments, including moxidectin and a combination of three dewormers, the researchers found that the combination treatment was very effective, completely eliminating the parasites in those groups. They also checked the effectiveness of ivermectin again a few months later and found it worked better than before, but still not as well as in the US-bred horses. This research highlights the importance of regularly checking for dewormer effectiveness to catch resistant parasites early.
Abstract
Anthelmintic resistance in equine cyathostomins is both widespread and highly prevalent in the benzimidazole and tetrahydropyrimidine classes; however, reports of resistance to macrocyclic lactone (ML) drugs are sparse and sporadic. This study reports a case of clear ML resistance in a group of Thoroughbred yearlings imported from Ireland to the US in 2019. Fecal egg count reduction (FECR) following ivermectin administered in February 2020 demonstrated 100% reduction in the US bred yearlings, but 93.5%, 70.5%, and 74.5% reduction in three groups of the imported yearlings. The two former groups were then retreated with ivermectin, yielding FECRs of 33.8% and 23.5%, respectively. Horses from these two groups were then assigned randomly to two possible treatments; moxidectin or a triple combination of moxidectin, oxibendazole, and pyrantel pamoate. The groups treated with moxidectin had FECRs of 90.2%, 57.3%, and 50.0%, while the triple combination had a 100% FECR in all treated groups. Subsequently, the efficacy of ivermectin was reassessed in June 2020 yielding FECRs of 99.8%, 87.7%, and 62.0% in the three imported groups. The FECRs of the US bred yearlings all remained in the 99-100% range. This is the first study to clearly demonstrate ML resistance in cyathostomins and to confirm the suspicion through reassessment. These data demonstrate that ML-resistant cyathostomins were imported from Ireland and serve to illustrate that the global movement of horses has the potential to quickly spread ML-resistant parasite isolates around the world. The equine industry is strongly encouraged to routinely monitor anthelmintic efficacy, so occurrence of ML resistant cyathostomins can be detected and appropriate interventions implemented as early as possible.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33022574/