Abstract

Pneumocystis is an atypical fungus that resides in the pulmonary parenchyma of many mammals, including humans and dogs. Immunocompetent human hosts are usually asymptomatically colonised or show subtle clinical signs, but some immunocompromised people can develop florid life-threatening Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP). Since much less is known concerning Pneumocystis in dogs, we posit the question: can Pneumocystis colonization be present in dogs with inflammatory airway or lung disease caused by other pathogens or disease processes? In this study, Pneumocystis DNA was detected in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) of 22/255 dogs (9%) with respiratory distress and/or chronic cough. Although young dogs (<1 year-of-age) and pedigree breeds were more often Pneumocystis-qPCR positive than older dogs and crossbreds, adult dogs with other infectious conditions and/or a history of therapy-resistant pulmonary disease could also be qPCR-positive, including two patients with suppression of the immune system. Absence of pathognomonic clinical or radiographic signs render it impossible to convincingly discriminate between overt PCP versus other lung/airway disease processes colonised by P. canis. It is possible that colonisation with P. canis might play a certain role as a co-pathogen in some canine patients with lower respiratory disease.

Highlights

  • Pneumocystis is a genus of fungi with long evolutionary adaption to a commensal lifestyle in the pulmonary parenchyma of a wide range of mammals, including humans and dogs [1]

  • A variety of disease conditions resulted in the clinical findings, including entities such as infectious ‘canine cough’, aspiration pneumonia and chronic bronchitis

  • Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) represents a fatal disease in dogs with severe disease, which can be acute or acute on chronic

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Summary

Introduction

Pneumocystis is a genus of fungi with long evolutionary adaption to a commensal lifestyle in the pulmonary parenchyma of a wide range of mammals, including humans and dogs [1]. Pneumocystis does not act as a zoonotic or anthropozoonotic pathogen, as each mammalian species studied far has its own host-adapted Pneumocystis species. Cross-infection experiments showed that Pneumocystis material obtained from a given animal species inoculated into a different (unrelated) animal species host is usually unable to induce infection and is rapidly eliminated from the lungs [1,3]. The taxonomy of Pneumocystis genus is continuously changing due to new and improved insights provided by phylogenetic studies. Five species have been described primarily in association with a specific host: Pneumocystis jirovecii in humans, P. carinii and

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