Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Is it safe to switch robenacoxib tablets and injections for cats
By Heit, Mark C et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2020·Elanco Animal Health, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Safety evaluation of the interchangeable use of robenacoxib in commercially-available tablets and solution for injection in cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of 34 healthy 4-month-old cats was given either robenacoxib tablets or an injectable form of the same medication to see if switching between the two was safe. Throughout the 37-day study, all cats remained healthy, with no serious side effects reported. Some minor issues, like slight swelling at the injection site, were noted, but these were not serious. The study concluded that it is safe to interchange between the oral and injectable forms of robenacoxib for managing pain and inflammation in cats.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: Robenacoxib (Onsior™) is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug developed for canine and feline use for the control of pain and inflammation. It is available as both tablets and solution for injection. The objective of this study was to evaluate the safety of the interchangeable use of commercially available robenacoxib formulations when administered to cats orally using 6 mg tablets and subcutaneously using a solution for injection containing 20 mg/mL. Thirty-four naïve healthy 4-month old cats were enrolled in this 37-day study and were randomized to four groups (three robenacoxib and one control). One robenacoxib group received the maximum recommended dose (MRD) rate of each formulation, while the other two received two and three times this dose rate. The cats underwent three 10-day treatment cycles comprised of seven days of once daily oral administration followed by three days of subcutaneous administration. The third cycle was followed by an additional seven days of oral treatment. The control group received oral empty gelatin capsules or subcutaneous saline injections. Assessment of safety was based on general health observations, clinical observations, physical, ophthalmic, electrocardiographic and neurological examinations, clinical pathology evaluations, food consumption, body weight, and macroscopic and microscopic examinations. Blood samples were collected for toxicokinetic evaluation. RESULTS: Blood concentrations of robenacoxib confirmed systemic exposure of all treated cats. All cats were in good health through study termination and there were no serious adverse events during the study. There were no changes in body weight, food consumption, ophthalmic, physical or neurological examinations during the study. Treatment-related abnormalities were of low occurrence at all doses and included injection site changes (transient edema with minimal or mild, subacute/chronic inflammation histologically) and prolongation of the QT interval. These findings were consistent with previously observed findings in studies with robenacoxib administered separately orally or subcutaneously in cats. Thus, there were no adverse effects that could be attributed specifically to the interchangeable use of oral and injectable robenacoxib. CONCLUSIONS: This 37-day laboratory study supports the safety of interchanging robenacoxib injection at a daily dose of 2 mg/kg with robenacoxib tablets at a daily dose of 1 mg/kg, or vice versa.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32988403/