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Study highlights environmental risks of isoxazoline
Isoxazoline gained popularity as an oral treatment for fleas and ticks.
Active ingredients from flea treatment pass into pet faeces.

A study has demonstrated how a relatively new class of antiparasitic medication could be endangering the natural environment.

The flea and tick treatment isoxazoline, introduced in 2013, gained popularity as one of the first oral treatments to control flea and ticks for a month or longer.

Pets that take this medication will pass the active compounds through their body, excreting them in their faeces. These substances contaminate ecosystems, particularly killing insects exposed to the faeces.

The drugs are particularly harming dung-feeding insects including flies, dung beetles and some butterflies. These insects have a key role in the environmental ecosystem – breaking down waste, recycling nutrients, improving soil quality and helping control pests.

Researchers in France monitored 20 dogs and 20 cats, owned by veterinary students, as they received isoxazoline treatments over three months.

Samples measured how much of the active ingredients remained in the faeces. Based on this, they estimated how much exposure the dung-feeding insects would face.

The analysis revealed that, even after the treatment period, two of the four active ingredients (fluralaner and lotilaner) in isoxazoline remained in the animals’ faeces.

A following environmental risk assessment suggested that dung-feeding insects could be experiencing high levels of exposure to isoxazoline as a result or routine treatments. Researchers warn this would disrupt important ecological processes and have serious consequences for environmental lifecycles.

The research team says that this discovery should prompt further study into anti-parasitic treatment and its harm to the environment. It has also called for the prolonged faecal elimination of these substances to be mentioned in the medication SPC.

The full study can be found in the journal Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry.

Image © Shutterstock.com/ Ekaterina43

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Defra shares new Sanitary and Phytosanitary guidance

News Story 1
 Defra has published guidance for the vet sector ahead of a proposed UK-EU Sanitary and Phytosanitary agreement.

The agreement, which will change the movement and trade of animals and related products, could see reductions in checks, paperwork and certification. As well as describing regulatory developments, the advice highlights the importance of animal ID, registration and traceability in disease control and other compliance arrangements.

The guidance can be found here. More detail is expected as negotiations progress. 

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News Shorts
New form for online veterinary medicines retailers

The Veterinary Medicines Directorate (VMD) has produced a new online form for retailers wishing to sell veterinary medicines on the internet.

The form replace the previous Word version and is part of the VMD's ongoing commitment to digitise its processes. Anyone retailing prescription medicines online, including POM-V, POM-VPS and NFA-VPS categories, is lawfully required to register with the VMD before trading.

The change only applies to new applicants. Retailers already listed on the VMD's Register of Online Retailers or registered under the Accredited Internet Retailer Scheme (AIRS) do not need to do anything.