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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How Bravecto treatment in dogs lowers mosquito survival and eggs

By Evans, Christopher Charles et al.·Published in Parasites & vectors·2023·Department of Infectious Diseases, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Treatment of dogs with Bravecto(fluralaner) reduces mosquito survival and fecundity.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study found that giving dogs Bravecto (fluralaner), a chewable treatment for parasites, significantly reduces the survival and reproduction of mosquitoes that could spread heartworm. Six dogs were treated with Bravecto, and their blood was used to feed mosquitoes over 15 weeks. The results showed that mosquitoes that fed on treated dogs had a much lower chance of surviving and laying eggs, especially in the first 13 weeks after treatment. This suggests that using Bravecto not only protects dogs from parasites but may also help reduce the risk of heartworm by decreasing the mosquito population.

People also search for: dog heartworm prevention · Bravecto for dogs · how does Bravecto work against mosquitoes

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mosquitoes serve as the vector of canine heartworm (Dirofilaria immitis), which represents a significant and persistent threat to canine health. A reduction in the longevity and/or reproductive success of mosquitoes that take a blood meal from fluralaner-treated dogs may consequently reduce the local transmission of heartworm and prevent new infections. A novel secondary effect of an oral formulation of the ectoparasiticide fluralaner (Bravecto) against a laboratory strain of the mosquito Aedes aegypti, a potential major vector of canine heartworm, was investigated in this study. METHODS: Six dogs were administered a single dose of fluralaner orally in the form of BravectoChews (at the labeled fluralaner dose of 25 mg/kg body weight), while six control dogs received no treatment. Mosquitoes were fed on blood that was collected from each dog prior to treatment and weekly for 15 weeks post-treatment to assess the continued effects of fluralaner as its serum level decreased. Mosquito fitness was assessed by three parameters: rate of successful blood-feeding, survival, and egg laying. RESULTS: Successful blood-feeding rate was similar between control and treatment groups. In the fluralaner treatment, mosquito survival was significantly reduced within the first 24 h after blood-feeding, for the first 12 weeks post-treatment of the dogs (efficacy range = 33.2-73.3%). Survival of mosquitoes up until a potentially heartworm-infective timepoint (14 days post-blood-feeding) was significantly reduced in the fluralaner-treated group at several timepoints (1, 2, 5, 11, 12, 13, 14, and 15 weeks post-treatment; efficacy range = 49.4-91.4%), but was less consistently reduced at the other timepoints. Egg laying by mosquitoes was almost completely suppressed for the first 13 weeks following treatment of the dogs with fluralaner (treatment efficacy ≥ 99.8%). CONCLUSIONS: Mosquitoes fed blood from fluralaner-treated dogs experienced a significant reduction in survival and fecundity. These findings support the potential for a reduction in heartworm transmission directly by lethal effects on the vector and indirectly through a reduction of the local vector population when mosquitoes are exposed to animals treated with fluralaner.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37106394/