Abstract

Anthelmintic resistance (AR) to Fasciola hepatica is emerging worldwide. Recently, AR to the adulticide compound albendazole (ABZ) was shown in Argentina and Spain. In Sweden, ABZ treatment failure against F. hepatica was first reported in sheep in 2012. The present study tested the efficacy of ABZ and triclabendazole (TCBZ) in sheep naturally infected with F. hepatica using a combination of three different diagnostic methods: faecal egg counts (FEC), coproantigen ELISA (cELISA) and Fasciola egg hatch test (FEHT). Two deworming trials, in November 2014 and January 2015, were performed on two sheep farms (farms A and B) in south-western Sweden. Except ABZ in November, treatment with ABZ or TCBZ achieved sufficient efficacy (97–100%) against adult F. hepatica on farm A. In contrast, ABZ treatment failed in the sheep flock on farm B, despite low initial faecal egg output. On farm B, ABZ efficacy based on FEC was 67% (95% CI: 35–84) and four of eight ewes tested were coproantigen-positive 21 days post-treatment. Ovicidal activity of ABZ against Fasciola eggs in isolates from both farms and one additional bovine isolate were tested by FEHT to exclude the presence of juvenile flukes and other factors such as dosing failure and poor quality of drug product. Irrespective of drug trial, data from FEHT showed significantly lower ovicidal activity of ABZ for the ovine farm B isolate than for the isolate from farm A. This confirms that the low efficacy of ABZ in sheep flock B was associated with ABZ resistance. Overall, the usefulness of three complementary methods for detection of ABZ resistance in the field was demonstrated.

Highlights

  • The common liver fluke (Fasciola hepatica) causes significant production disease in sheep and cattle worldwide

  • FECR values were lower on day 7 in both ABZ and TCBZ groups and raised to 99% on day 21 post-treatment (Table 2) on farm A likely due to continuous release of eggs remaining in bile ducts and gall bladder

  • ABZ resistance is difficult to prove in the field due to the potential presence of juvenile flukes, which are tolerant to the drug and unaffected by treatment

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Summary

Introduction

The common liver fluke (Fasciola hepatica) causes significant production disease in sheep and cattle worldwide. Control of fasciolosis is based on treatment with flukicides that differ in chemical structure and mode of action, and in their efficacy against different liver fluke developmental stages (Fairweather and Boray, 1999). Triclabendazole (TCBZ) and albendazole (ABZ) are common benzimidazoles used against liver fluke infection (Skuce and Zadoks, 2013). TCBZ is effective against both adult and juvenile flukes from the age of 2 days, and is the drug of choice for both sheep and cattle, whereas ABZ is effective only against adult flukes (from 12 weeks) (Fairweather and Boray, 1999). Novobilský et al / International Journal for Parasitology: Drugs and Drug Resistance 6 (2016) 141e147

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