Abstract

BackgroundThe clinical efficacy of fluralaner chewable tablets (Bravecto™, MSD Animal Health) against naturally acquired Linognathus setosus infestations on dogs was evaluated compared with permethrin (Exspot®, MSD Animal Health) treatment.MethodsPrivately-owned dogs naturally infested with L. setosus from 21 different households were randomly allocated to two treatment groups. Fourteen dogs were treated once orally with fluralaner and ten dogs were treated once topically with permethrin, at the recommended label dose. Live L. setosus on all dogs were counted before treatment and 1, 7, 28 (both groups) and 84 (fluralaner group) days post-treatment according to a coat parting technique at pre-specified locations and lice species were confirmed microscopically. At the same time points, a veterinary dermatology severity score and an owner’s perceived pruritus score were recorded.ResultsPercentage reduction in geometric mean L. setosus counts, comparing post- with pre-treatment counts within each group, were 85.7% (day 1), 96.8% (day 7) and 100% (days 28 and 84) for the fluralaner (two-sided two-sample t-test, P ≤ 0.0088 for days 1–84) and 67.5% (day 1), 90.3% (day 7) 99.1% (day 28) for the permethrin group (two-sided two-sample t-test, P ≤ 0.0014 for days 7–28). No lice were seen on fluralaner-treated dogs 28 and 84 days post-treatment. In contrast, two permethrin-treated dogs were re-treated at 7 and 28 days after initial treatment because of observed lice. Owner’s perceived pruritus scores were reduced compared to pre-treatment levels by 23.8% (day 1), 31.1% (day 7), 70.4% (day 28) and 99.5% (day 84) after fluralaner treatment and 21.3% (day 1), 45.8% (day 7), and 78.1% (day 28) after permethrin treatment. Dermatological signs were improved compared to pre-treatment levels in both treatment groups.ConclusionsSingle oral fluralaner treatment eliminated natural L. setosus infestation on dogs within 28 days and led to complete dermatological recovery that was maintained until the study end on day 84. Single topical permethrin treatment reduced the number of L. setosus by 99.1% at day 28 although two animals required unscheduled re-treatment.

Highlights

  • The clinical efficacy of fluralaner chewable tablets (BravectoTM, MSD Animal Health) against naturally acquired Linognathus setosus infestations on dogs was evaluated compared with permethrin (Exspot®, MSD Animal Health) treatment

  • No adverse event related to fluralaner or permethrin administration was observed in any dog

  • Permethrin administered once topically reduced the number of L. setosus by 99.1% at 28 days post-treatment

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Summary

Introduction

The clinical efficacy of fluralaner chewable tablets (BravectoTM, MSD Animal Health) against naturally acquired Linognathus setosus infestations on dogs was evaluated compared with permethrin (Exspot®, MSD Animal Health) treatment. Lice are an occasional ectoparasite of dogs worldwide, but appear to be common in colder climates including in the Scandinavian countries [1]. Lice are often the most common ectoparasites in these countries where the climate is less hospitable for fleas and ticks and, flea and tick parasiticides are not routinely used. Lice are highly host-specific ectoparasites and differentiated between biting lice, feeding on epidermal tissue debris and sebaceous secretions, and sucking lice, feeding on blood [3]. They spend their entire life on one host, and several lice species prefer specific locations on the host’s body. Lice are mainly spread by direct physical contact between individuals; contaminated brushes or combs can transmit these parasites [3]

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