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How coproantigen testing helps find intestinal parasites in dogs

By Burton, K Wade et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2025·IDEXX Laboratories, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: The utility of coproantigen testing in screening populations.

Canine giardiasisStomach & digestion

Plain-English summary

A study found that a coproantigen test, which detects intestinal parasites like roundworms and Giardia, is more effective than traditional fecal flotation methods in dogs and cats. Out of nearly 900,000 samples tested, most were negative for parasites, but the coproantigen test identified additional cases that would require treatment even when fecal flotation showed no parasites. This means that using the coproantigen test can help veterinarians better manage parasite infections in pets. Overall, the coproantigen test is recommended as a reliable way to screen for intestinal parasites.

People also search for: dog intestinal parasites test · cat Giardia treatment · how to treat roundworms in pets

Abstract

Detection of intestinal parasites is essential for veterinarians to assess risk of parasite infections. Traditionally, detection of intestinal parasites has relied primarily on detection of ova with fecal flotation methods. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the clinical utility of a commercially available coproantigen immunoassay detecting roundworms, hookworms, whipworms, Dipylidium caninum, Giardia and Cystoisospora spp. for detecting GI parasite infections in dogs and cats. The study evaluated test positivity of coproantigen and centrifugal fecal flotation and how often fecal flotation results would lead to clinical management changes compared to the result on coproantigen. Results for 898,299 samples submitted to a commercial reference laboratory (IDEXX Laboratories) over the three-month period from March 6, 2024, through June 6, 2024, with paired results for coproantigen immunoassay and centrifugal fecal flotation (O&P) were used for analysis. 83.7 % of samples were negative by both coproantigen and O&P. 6.1 % were positive on both methods and would result in the same treatment indicated. An additional 9.4 % of samples had a positive coproantigen result indicating a need for treatment but had no parasite detected by O&P. Finally, when samples with evidence of coprophagy are excluded, only 0.6 % of samples had a positive O&P result but were negative for all coproantigens. Coproantigen was more effective at identifying dogs and cats where antiparasitic management was needed than O&P. The results of this study support the use of coproantigen immunoassay testing as a highly accurate and effective screening method for intestinal parasitism.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40199151/