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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Oral rabies vaccines tested for safety and effectiveness in dogs

By Rupprecht, Charles E et al.·Published in Virus research·2005·Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Oral vaccination of dogs with recombinant rabies virus vaccines.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of beagle puppies received an oral rabies vaccine to see if it could effectively protect them from the virus. After vaccination, the puppies showed no signs of illness, and most developed antibodies against rabies within a couple of weeks. When they were later exposed to the rabies virus, all but one of the vaccinated puppies remained healthy, while all control puppies that did not receive the vaccine developed rabies. This study suggests that the new oral rabies vaccine could be a safe and effective option for protecting dogs against rabies in the future.

People also search for: dog rabies vaccine effectiveness · oral rabies vaccine for dogs · beagle rabies prevention

Abstract

Oral rabies virus (RV) vaccines are used to immunize a diversity of mammalian carnivores, but no single biological is effective for all major species. Recently, advances in reverse genetics have allowed the design of recombinant RV for consideration as new vaccines. The objective of this experiment was to examine the safety, immunogenicity and efficacy of recombinant RV vaccines administered to captive dogs by the oral route, compared to a commercial vaccinia-rabies glycoprotein (V-RG) recombinant virus vaccine. Animals consisted of naive purpose-bred beagles of both sexes, and were 6 months of age or older. Dogs were randomly assigned to one of six groups, and received either diluent or vaccine (PBS; V-RG; RV SN10-333; RV SPBN-Cyto c; RV SPBNGA; RV SPBNGAGA), with at least six animals per group. On day 0, 1 ml of each vaccine (or PBS) was administered to the oral cavity of each dog, at an approximate concentration of 10(8) to 10(9) TCID50. After vaccination, dogs were observed daily and bled weekly, for 5 weeks, prior to RV challenge. No signs of illness related to vaccination were detected during the observation period. Excluding the controls, RV neutralizing antibodies were detected in the majority of animals within 1-2 weeks of primary vaccination. Thereafter, all dogs were inoculated in the masseter muscle with a street virus of canine origin. All control animals developed rabies, but no vaccinates succumbed, with the exception of a single dog in the V-RG group. Review of these preliminary data demonstrates the non-inferiority of recombinant RV products, as concerns both safety and efficacy, and supports the suggestion that these vaccines may hold promise for future development as oral immunogens for important carnivore species, such as dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15896409/