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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Vaccines do not help healthy cats with ongoing feline leukemia virus

By Helfer-Hungerbuehler, A Katrin et al.·Published in Vaccine·2015·Vetsuisse Faculty·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: No benefit of therapeutic vaccination in clinically healthy cats persistently infected with feline leukemia virus.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of six cats that were persistently infected with feline leukemia virus (FeLV) received two different types of vaccines designed to help their immune systems fight the virus. Unfortunately, the vaccines did not improve the cats' health or help them live longer. While some cats developed antibodies to the virus, these did not provide any protection. The study concluded that vaccinating cats already infected with FeLV is not beneficial and recommended testing all cats for FeLV before considering vaccination.

People also search for: cat leukemia vaccination · feline leukemia virus treatment · FeLV positive cat care

Abstract

Therapeutic vaccinations have a potential application in infections where no curative treatment is available. In contrast to HIV, efficacious vaccines for a cat retrovirus, feline leukemia virus (FeLV), are commercially available. However, the infection is still prevalent, and no effective treatment of the infection is known. By vaccinating persistently FeLV-infected cats and presenting FeLV antigens to the immune system of the host, e.g., in the form of recombinant and/or adjuvanted antigens, we intended to shift the balance toward an advantage of the host so that persistent infection could be overcome by the infected cat. Two commercially available FeLV vaccines efficacious in protecting naïve cats from FeLV infection were tested in six experimentally and persistently FeLV-infected cats: first, a canarypox-vectored vaccine, and second, an adjuvanted, recombinant envelope vaccine was repeatedly administered with the aim to stimulate the immune system. No beneficial effects on p27 antigen and plasma viral RNA loads, anti-FeLV antibodies, or life expectancy of the cats were detected. The cats were unable to overcome or decrease viremia. Some cats developed antibodies to FeLV antigens although not protective. Thus, we cannot recommend vaccinating persistently FeLV-infected cats as a means of improving their FeLV status, quality of life or life expectancy. We suggest testing of all cats for FeLV infection prior to FeLV vaccination.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25698488/