| Literature DB >> 29061926 |
Alison Diesel1, Karen Moriello2.
Abstract
Gingival overgrowth is an uncommon adverse effect of cyclosporine administration in veterinary species. In people, gingival overgrowth is a common complication of cyclosporine administration for immunosuppression, generally following transplant procedures. Azithromycin has been used successfully for managing gingival overgrowth in human transplant patients when cyclosporine administration cannot be reduced or discontinued. This case series describes six dogs being administered cyclosporine for various dermatologic diseases that developed gingival overgrowth. The dogs were prescribed systemic azithromycin, with or without concurrent dose reduction of cyclosporine. Oral administration of 6.6-10.8 mg/kg of azithromycin once daily for 4-14 weeks was effective for complete clinical resolution of gingival overgrowth. In most cases, gingival overgrowth did not recur even with continued cyclosporine administration long-term. Adverse events of long-term azithromycin administration did not occur in any of the dogs. This series highlights a potentially beneficial medical treatment option for gingival overgrowth even when cyclosporine dose reduction is not possible or elected, without the need for surgical resection of proliferative gingival tissue.Entities:
Keywords: azithromycin; cyclosporine; dog; gingival overgrowth
Year: 2015 PMID: 29061926 PMCID: PMC5644608 DOI: 10.3390/vetsci2010013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Sci ISSN: 2306-7381
Figure 1Case #1—Severe gingival overgrowth over the upper and lower incisors (a); and premolars and molars (b) prior to initiating azithromycin therapy.
Figure 2Same dog as in Figure 1(a,b), showing complete clinical remission of gingival overgrowth following 14 weeks of continued azithromycin administration.
Signalment and summary of case specific details.
| Case Number | Age, Sex, Breed | Underlying Disease | Duration of CsA Therapy at Diagnosis (Months) | Dose of CsA at Diagnosis (mg/kg) | Changes in CsA Dose Post Diagnosis | Concurrent Drugs During Treatment | Azithromycin Dose | Weeks to Clinical Remission | Follow-Up | Relapse |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | FS, 4 year, golden retriever | AD | 9 | 3.8 q24h | Changed interval to q48 h | Ketoconazole 3.8 mg/kg/day | 9.6 mg/kg/day | 14 weeks | 6 year | No |
| 2 | MC, 2.5 year, Pembroke Welsh corgi | AD, failed ASIT | 9 | 5.5 q24h; 4.3 q24h (at time of GO recurrence) | Decrease to 3.7 mg/kg/day; None | None | 9.3 mg/kg/day; 10.8 mg/kg/day | 12 weeks; 8weeks | 4 year | Yes at 1 year, remission induced within 8 weeks of retreatment |
| 3 | MC, 3 year, German shepherd | AD | 12 | 2.5 q24h | None | None | 6.6 mg/kg/day | 6 weeks | 1 year | No |
| 4 | MC, 8 year Labrador retriever | AD, failed ASIT | 24 | 5.3 q48h | None | None | 8.9 mg/kg/day | 6 weeks | 3 year | No |
| 5 | MC, 9 year Boston terrier | AD, failed ASIT | 12 | 1.8 q24h | None | None | 8.9 mg/kg/day | 7 weeks | 1 year; CsA eventually discontinued due to favorable response to SLIT | No |
| 6 | MC, 9 year, German shepherd | Perianal Fistula | 1.5 | 4.6 q12h | Decrease CsA to once a day | Ketoconazole 6.3 mg/kg/day | 7.8 mg/kg/day | 4 weeks | 1 year | No |
Abbreviations: AD = atopic dermatitis; ASIT = allergen-specific immunotherapy (injectable); CsA = cyclosporine; GO = gingival overgrowth; SLIT = sublingual immunotherapy.