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PETS DON'T NEED SHOTS EVERY YEAR
(Translation: Companion animals don't need
shots every year.)
J.B.S
Experts say annual vaccines waste money, can be risky
By
Leigh Hopper
Houston Chronicle Medical Writer

Debra Grierson leaves the veterinarian's office clutching
Maddie and Beignet, her Yorkshire terriers, and a credit
card receipt for nearly $400.
That's the cost for the tiny dogs' annual exams, including
heartworm checks, dental checks and a barrage of shots.
"They're just like our children," said the Houston
homemaker. "We would do anything, whatever they needed."
What many pet owners don't know, researchers say, is that
most yearly vaccines for dogs and cats are a waste of money
-- and potentially deadly. Shots for the most important pet
diseases last three to seven years, or
longer, and annual shots put pets at greater risk of
vaccine-related problems.
The Texas Department of Health is holding public hearings to
consider changing the yearly rabies shot requirement to once
every three years. Thirty-three other states already have
adopted a triennial rabies schedule. Texas A&M University's
and most other veterinary schools now teach that most shots
should be given every three years.
"Veterinarians are charging customers $36 million a year for
vaccinations that are not necessary," said Bob Rogers, a vet
in Spring who adopted a reduced vaccine schedule. "Not only
are these vaccines unnecessary, they're causing harm to
pets."
Just as humans don't need a measles shot every year, neither
do dogs or cats need annual injections for illnesses such as
parvo, distemper or kennel cough. Even rabies shots are
effective for at least three years.
The news has been slow to reach consumers, partly because
few veterinarians outside academic settings are embracing
the concept. Vaccine makers haven't done the studies needed
to change vaccine labels. Vets, who charge $30 to $60 for
yearly shots, are loath to defy vaccine label instructions
and lose an important source of revenue. In addition, they
worry their patients won't fare as well without yearly
exams.
"I know some vets feel threatened because they think,
`People won't come back to my office if I don't have the
vaccine as a carrot,' " said Alice Wolf, a professor of
small-animal medicine at Texas A&M and an advocate of
reduced vaccinations. "A yearly exam is very important."
The movement to extend vaccine intervals is gaining ground
because of growing evidence that vaccines themselves can
trigger a fatal cancer in cats and a deadly blood disorder
in dogs.
Rogers conducts public seminars on the subject with
evangelical zeal but thus far has been unsuccessful in
persuading the Texas Veterinary Medical Association to adopt
a formal policy.
"I'm asking the Texas attorney general's office if this is
theft by deception," said Rogers, whose Critter Fixer
practice won an ethics award from the Better Business Bureau
in 2000. "They just keep coming out with
more vaccines that are unnecessary and don't work.
Professors give seminars, and nobody comes and nobody
changes."
When rabies shots became common for pets in the 1950s, no
one questioned the value of annual vaccination. Distemper,
which kills 50 percent of victims, could be warded off with
a shot. Parvovirus, which kills swiftly and gruesomely by
causing a toxic proliferation of bacteria in the digestive
system, was vanquished with a vaccine. Over the years, more
and more shots were added to the schedule, preventing costly
and potentially deadly disease in furry family members.
Then animal doctors began noticing something ominous: rare
instances of cancer in normal, healthy cats and an unusual
immune reaction in dogs. The shots apparently caused feline
fibrosarcoma, a grotesque tumor at the site of the shot,
which is fatal if not discovered early and cut out
completely. Dogs developed a vaccine-related disease in
which the dog's body rejects its own blood.
"That really caused people to ask the question, `If we can
cause that kind of harm with a vaccine ... are we
vaccinating too much?' " said Ronald Schultz, a veterinary
immunologist at the University of Wisconsin School of
Veterinary Medicine. "As you get more and more (vaccines),
the possibility that a vaccine is going to cause an adverse
event increases quite a bit."
Less frequent vaccines could reduce that risk, Schultz
reasoned. Having observed that humans got lifetime immunity
from most of their childhood vaccines, Schultz applied the
same logic to dogs. He vaccinated them for rabies, parvo,
kennel cough and distemper and then exposed them to the
disease-causing organisms after three, five and seven years.
The animals remained healthy, validating his hunch.
He continued his experiment by measuring antibody levels in
the dogs' blood nine and 15 years after vaccination. He
found the levels sufficient to prevent disease.
Fredric Scott, professor emeritus at Cornell University
College of Veterinary Medicine, obtained similar results
comparing 15 vaccinated cats with 17 nonvaccinated cats. He
found the cats' immunity lasted 7.5 years
after vaccination. In 1998, the American Association of
Feline Practitioners published guidelines based on Scott's
work, recommending vaccines every three years.
"The feeling of the AAFP is, cats that receive the vaccines
every three years are as protected from those infections as
they would be if they were vaccinated every year," said
James Richards, director of the Feline Health Center at
Cornell. "I'm one of many people who believe the evidence is
really compelling."
Texas A&M's Wolf said the three-year recommendation "is
probably just as arbitrary as anything else," and nothing
more than a "happy medium" between vaccine makers'
recommendations and the findings by Schultz and Scott aimed
at reducing vaccine-related problems.
But many vets are uncomfortable making a drastic change in
practice without data from large-scale studies to back them
up. There is no animal equivalent of the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, which monitors outbreaks of
vaccine-preventable disease in people, thus keeping tabs on
a vaccine's effectiveness.
Federal authorities require vaccine makers to show only that
a vaccine is effective for a reasonable amount of time,
usually one year. Richards notes that studies to get a
feline vaccine licensed in the first place are
typically quite small, involving 25 to 30 cats at most.
There is no federal requirement to show a vaccine's maximum
duration of effectiveness. Arne Zislin, a veterinarian with
Fort Dodge Animal Health, the largest animal vaccine maker
in the world, said such studies would be expensive and
possibly inhumane, requiring hundreds of animals, some of
them kept in isolation for up to five years.
"I don't think anyone with consideration for animals would
really want to go through that process," said Zislin,
another vet who believes current data are insufficient to
support an extended schedule.
Diane Wilkie, veterinarian at Rice Village Animal Hospital,
said she tells pet owners that vaccines appear to last
longer than a year, but her office hasn't officially changed
its protocol yet. She said 20 percent to 30
percent of her cat patients are on the extended schedule.
"It's kind of a hard situation. The manufacturers still
recommend a year, but they're the manufacturers," Wilkie
said. "It's hard to change a whole professional mentality --
although I do think it will change."
In Houston, yearly pet examinations typically cost $50 to
$135, with shots making up one-third to half of the expense.
A dental check, heartworm test, fecal check and overall
physical are usually included in the price. Without the
shots, vets could expect to lose a chunk of that fee.
But an increasing number of vets are emphasizing other
services, such as surgery. Wolf said savings on vaccines
might prompt pet owners to get their pets' teeth cleaned
instead. An in-house test to check antibody levels is in
development.
"I definitely think there's a profit issue in there; don't
get me wrong," Wilkie said. "(But) people are willing to
spend money on their pets for diseases. Although vaccines
are part of the profit, they aren't that big a
part. We just did a $700 knee surgery."
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Vaccination findings - Veterinary research challenges
the notion that pets need to be vaccinated every 12 months.
Some of the findings:
Dog vaccines/Minimum duration of immunity
· Canine rabies - 3 years
· Canine parainfluenza - 3 years
· Canine distemper (Onderstepoort strain) - 5 years
· Canine distemper (Rockborn strain) - 7 years
· Canine adenovirus (kennel cough) - 7 years
· Canine parvovirus - 7 years
Cat vaccines/Minimum duration of immunity
· Cat rabies - 3 years
· Feline panleukopenia virus - 6 years
· Feline herpesvirus - 5 or 6 years
· Feline calicivirus - 3 years
Recommendations for dogs
· Parvovirus, adenovirus, parainfluenza, distemper:
Following initial puppy shots, provide booster one year
later, and every three years thereafter.
· Rabies: At 16 weeks of age, thereafter as required by law.
· Bordatella: Use prior to boarding; may be repeated up to
six times a year.
· Coronavirus: Not recommended in private homes. Prior to
boarding, may be given to dogs 8 weeks or older, and
repeated every six months.
· Lyme: Not recommended.
· Giardia: Not recommended.
Recommendations for cats
· Panleukopenia, herpesvirus (rhinotracheitis), calicivirus:
Following
initial kitten shots, provide booster one year later and
every three years
thereafter.
· Rabies: At 8 weeks of age, thereafter as required by law.
· Feline leukemia: Use only in high-risk cats. Best
protection is two
vaccines prior to 12 weeks of age, with boosters repeated
annually.
· Bordatella: Use prior to boarding.
· Feline infectious peritonitis: Not recommended.
· Chlamydia: Not recommended.
· Ringworm: May be used during an outbreak in a home.
Sources: Ronald Schultz, University of Wisconsin School of
Veterinary
Medicine; Fredric Scott, Cornell University College of
Veterinary Medicine;
Colorado State University; University of California-Davis
Center for
Companion Animal Health.
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