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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Safety of a fungal vaccine for treating cat skin fungus

By Westhoff, D et al.·Published in The Veterinary record·2010·Boehringer Ingelheim Vetmedica, Germany·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Safety of a non-adjuvanted therapeutic vaccine for the treatment of feline dermatophytosis.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A study looked at the safety of a new vaccine for treating ringworm (dermatophytosis) in cats. Cats aged 12 weeks and older received either the vaccine or a placebo in a series of injections. The researchers found that both groups had similar mild reactions at the injection site, but these were not serious and went away quickly. Overall, the vaccine was considered safe, with no severe side effects reported.

People also search for: cat ringworm treatment vaccine · feline dermatophytosis vaccine safety · side effects of cat vaccines

Abstract

The safety of a non-adjuvanted inactivated fungal vaccine for the treatment of dermatophytosis in cats was investigated in two studies: a controlled laboratory study, and a placebo-controlled double-blind field study with a cross-over design in Europe. In the laboratory study, two groups of 10 cats each were administered an intramuscular twofold overdose, followed by five single 1 ml doses, of either vaccine or control product at 14-day intervals. In the field study, cats were treated with three intramuscular injections of 1 ml vaccine administered at 14-day intervals, as recommended by the manufacturer. A total of 89 cats were enrolled in the field study and divided into two groups to receive either vaccine or placebo for the first three treatments, followed by the opposite product for the final three treatments. The cats enrolled in the two studies were 12 weeks of age or older, as recommended by the manufacturer. All the cats were monitored closely for possible injection site reactions, systemic reactions (including changes in rectal body temperature) and adverse events. The results from both studies showed no significant differences between the vaccinated cats and the control or placebo-treated cats with regard to local or systemic reactions. A few mild to moderate local reactions were noted, but these were evenly distributed between the vaccinated and placebo-treated cats and resolved within a few days. No severe or serious adverse events related to the vaccinations were observed.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21262673/