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Commercially approved vaccines for canine leishmaniosis: a review of available data on their safety and efficacy

Rita Velez, Montserrat Gállego

2020Tropical Medicine & International Health114 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Canine leishmaniosis is an important vector-borne zoonosis caused mainly by Leishmania infantum. Diagnosis and treatment of affected individuals can be particularly complex, hindering infection control in endemic areas. Methods to prevent canine leishmaniosis include the use of topical insecticides, prophylactic immunotherapy and vaccination. Four vaccines against canine leishmaniosis have been licensed since 2004, two in Brazil (Leishmune®, the production and marketing licence of which was withdrawn in 2014, and Leish-Tec®) and two in Europe (CaniLeish® and LetiFend®). After several years of marketing, doubts remain regarding vaccine efficacy and effectiveness, potential infectiousness of vaccinated and infected animals or the interference of vaccine-induced antibodies in L. infantum serological diagnosis. This review summarises the scientific evidence for each of the vaccines commercially approved for canine leishmaniosis, while discussing possible weaknesses of these studies. Furthermore, it raises the need to address important questions related to vaccination impact in Leishmania-endemic countries and the importance of post-marketing pharmacological surveillance.

Topics & Concepts

Leishmania infantumVaccinationMedicineZoonosisImmunologySerologyMarketing authorizationLeishmaniasisAntibodyBiologyBioinformaticsVisceral leishmaniasisResearch on Leishmaniasis StudiesLeptospirosis research and findings
Commercially approved vaccines for canine leishmaniosis: a review of available data on their safety and efficacy | Litcius