Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Safety of new topical parasite treatment for kittens tested
By Gupta, Aradhana et al.·Published in Parasite (Paris, France)·2021·Boehringer-Ingelheim Animal Health, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Target animal safety evaluation of a novel topical combination of esafoxolaner, eprinomectin and praziquantel for cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of kittens was tested with a new topical product called NexGardCombo, which combines three ingredients to treat and prevent parasites. The kittens received multiple doses of the product over several weeks, and while one kitten showed temporary neurological signs after a high dose, it fully recovered within two days. Overall, the studies found that NexGardCombo was safe for kittens, even at high doses. This means that pet owners can feel confident using this product to protect their cats from internal and external parasites.
People also search for: kitten parasite treatment · NexGardCombo safety for cats · topical flea treatment for kittens
Abstract
The safety profile of NexGardCombo, a novel topical product for cats combining esafoxolaner, eprinomectin and praziquantel, for the treatment and prevention of internal and external parasites, was evaluated in kittens, in two margin-of-safety studies (Studies #1 and #2), and in an oral tolerance study (Study #3). In the margin of safety studies, kittens were dosed several times topically with multiples of the maximum exposure dose (1×): in Study #1, 3× and 5× doses four times at 2-week intervals; in Study #2, 1×, 3× and 5× doses six times at 4-week intervals. In Study #3, kittens were dosed orally once with a 1× dose. Furthermore, in Study #1, another group of kittens was dosed topically twice at a 4-week interval with a formulation of esafoxolaner as the sole active ingredient dosed at 23×. Physical examinations and clinical pathology analyses were performed throughout the studies, followed by necropsy and detailed histopathological evaluation in Studies #1 and #2. No significant treatment related effects were observed in the three studies, except for one occurrence of reversible neurological signs attributed to eprinomectin in one cat after the third 5× dose in Study #2, with clinical signs observed nine hours after dosing, pronounced for a few hours, significantly improved the next day, and absent 2 days after dosing. In conclusion, NexGardCombo was demonstrated safe in kittens following repeated topical administrations and following oral ingestion, and very high topical doses of esafoxolaner were well tolerated.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33812450/