Abstract

BackgroundEffective control of tick infestations on dogs is important to reduce the risk of transmission of bacterial, viral, and protozoal pathogens. Laboratory studies were initiated to determine the efficacy of lotilaner against common ticks infesting dogs in the United States.MethodsEight studies investigated the efficacy of lotilaner against ticks. In two studies dogs were infested with both Dermacentor variabilis and Rhipicephalus sanguineus: one additional study was completed for each of these species. Two studies assessed infestations with Amblyomma americanum and two with Ixodes scapularis. In all studies, dogs were ranked and blocked by counts from pre-treatment infestations and randomly allocated, at least eight per group, to be treated orally with lotilaner (minimum dose rate 20 mg/kg), or to be untreated controls. Treatments were administered on Day 0, within 30 min after dogs were fed. In all studies, infestations were performed with 50 adult ticks on Days -2, 7, 14, 21 and 28, and also on Day 35 for R. sanguineus, D. variabilis and I. scapularis. Tick counts were completed 48 h after treatment or after each subsequent challenge. An adequate infestation was defined as at least 25% of the infestation dose recovered from each of at least six control animals at each evaluation. Efficacy calculations for the primary objective were based on geometric means.ResultsIn all studies, lotilaner was 100% effective against existing infestations. For post-treatment assessments, on only two occasions did efficacy fall below 99%: in one D. variabilis study efficacy was 98.0% on Day 35 and in one I. scapularis study efficacy on Day 16 was 98.4%. Only mild and transient adverse events were observed, and none were considered to be related to treatment.ConclusionLotilaner was completely effective against existing infestations with four common species of ticks, D. variabilis, R. sanguineus, A. americanum and I. scapularis, that affect dogs in North America, with at least 4 weeks efficacy of 98.0% or more against subsequent challenge infestations. These results show that lotilaner is a highly effective isoxazoline that offers sustained efficacy against ticks through and beyond the one-month end-of-dose treatment interval.

Highlights

  • Effective control of tick infestations on dogs is important to reduce the risk of transmission of a variety of bacterial, viral, and protozoal pathogens

  • The exceptions were in controlgroup infestation rates in a D. variabilis study (Study 2, on Day 9), a R. sanguineus study (Study 3, Day 2), and in the study with field-collected I. scapularis (Study 8, Day 16)

  • The high efficacy against ticks was sustained in all studies throughout the post-treatment assessment periods, and on only two occasions did geometric mean live tick count efficacy fall below 99%: in a D. variabilis study this was due to the presence on Day 35 of three live unengorged ticks on a single dog, and in an I. scapularis study on Day 16 a single dog had three live attached, engorged ticks and one dog had one live attached, engorged tick

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Summary

Introduction

Effective control of tick infestations on dogs is important to reduce the risk of transmission of bacterial, viral, and protozoal pathogens. Effective control of tick infestations on dogs is important to reduce the risk of transmission of a variety of bacterial, viral, and protozoal pathogens. Control of these species has been dependent on topically applied chemicals or on the use of collars that release chemicals onto the treated animal’s hair coat. Both measures carry some risk of owner exposure to the pesticide, or of oral ingestion by the treated or in-contact pets [2]. To ensure effectiveness, topical products must be carefully applied by the owner

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