Antibody response after feline panleukopenia virus vaccination in kittens with and without intestinal parasites

Author:

Weidinger Anna-Karina1ORCID,Hartmann Katrin1ORCID,Barutzki Dieter2,Truyen Uwe3,Abd El Wahed Ahmed3,Zablotski Yury1ORCID,Bergmann Michèle1

Affiliation:

1. LMU Small Animal Clinic, Munich, Germany

2. Veterinary Laboratory Freiburg, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany

3. Institute of Animal Hygiene and Veterinary Public Health, Veterinary Faculty, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany

Abstract

Objectives Vaccinations should only be given to healthy cats, and deworming before vaccination is generally recommended; however, so far, no study has investigated the influence of intestinal parasitic infection on the immune response in kittens. The aim of this prospective study was to compare the antibody response to feline panleukopenia virus (FPV) vaccination in kittens with and without intestinal parasites. Methods Overall, 74 healthy kittens were included. Of these, 17 had intestinal parasites (12/17 Toxocara cati, 6/17 Cystoisospora felis, 1/17 Capillaria species). Both kittens with and without (n = 57) parasites received two primary kitten vaccinations with modified live FPV vaccines in a 4-week interval starting at the age of 8–12 weeks. Anti-FPV antibodies were determined at the beginning of the study (week 0) and at week 8 (4 weeks after the second vaccination) by haemagglutination inhibition. A ⩾four-fold titre increase (week 8 vs week 0) was defined as a response to vaccination. Comparison of the immune response in the kittens with and without intestinal parasites was performed using Pearson’s χ2 test. Results Pre-vaccination antibodies were present in 4/17 (23.5%) kittens with intestinal parasites and in 24/57 (42.1%) without parasites. A ⩾four-fold titre increase was seen in 13/17 (76.5%) kittens with parasites compared with 32/57 (56.1%) kittens without parasites. There was neither a significant difference in pre-vaccination antibodies ( P = 0.17), nor in vaccination response ( P = 0.13) between kittens with and without parasites. Conclusions and relevance The results indicate that asymptomatic intestinal infections with endoparasites do not interfere with the immune response to kitten vaccination series. Parasitic infection (at least with T cati, C felis and Capillaria species) is therefore not a reason to postpone important vaccinations.

Funder

boehringer ingelheim

Ingelheim Rhine

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference61 articles.

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5. Ständige Impfkommission Veterinärmedizin (StIKo Vet). Leitlinie zur Impfung von Kleintieren. https://www.openagrar.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/openagrar_derivate_00034757/Impfleitlinie-Kleintiere2021-01-01-bf.pdf (2022, accessed 15 December 2023).

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