Clarke Atkins, DVM, Diplomate ACVIM (Internal Medicine & Cardiology)
The Heartworm Hotline column is cosponsored by Today’s Veterinary Practice and The American Heartworm Society (heartwormsociety.org). This series presents questions and answers on topics related to heartworm infection, prevention, diagnostics, and/or treatment.
QUESTION: In the July/August 2012 Heartworm Hotline article—Doxycycline in the Management of Heartworm Disease—the role of doxycycline in the medical management of heartworm infection was discussed. What about other drugs? For example, when would you employ corticosteroids, aspirin, and NSAIDs?
ANSWER:Â In my opinion, steroids and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) have a definite, but restricted role in the treatment of heartworm disease (HWD) in dogs. This article will discuss use of corticosteroids; the next article will examine the role of NSAIDs.
ROLE OF CORTICOSTEROIDS
The anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive effects inherent to corticosteroids are therapeutic for some aspects of HWD. I make the disease versus infection distinction because I see almost no role for corticosteroids in heartworm infection (HWI) unaccompanied by clinical signs (see Heartworm Infection versus Heartworm Disease).
In general, this class of drugs is indicated in HWD for:
- Pulmonary parenchymal complications1,2,4
- Treatment or prevention of adverse reactions to microfilaricides and adulticides.
However, each patient is an individual and corticosteroids are not a benign therapy. Therefore, it is important that practitioners evaluate each unique case, weighing the pros and cons, to decide whether corticosteroids should be part of their treatment protocols.
CORTICOSTEROIDS IN DOGS WITH HEARTWORM INFECTION
In heavily endemic areas, practitioners assume heavy heartworm burdens and often pretreat infected dogs with corticosteroids, prior to and during adulticidal therapy.
The American Heartworm Society’s position on administering ancillary steroid therapy prior to adulticide is: In highly endemic areas, where animals are more likely to have significant worm burdens, glucocorticoids, such as prednisone may be used. This is far from a ringing endoresement for use of corticosteroids in asymptomatic canine patients and has geographic limitations in terms of heartworm prevalence.
I do not advocate the use of corticosteroids to treat chronic HWI in dogs with no clinical signs of disease or little to no risk for developing significant pulmonary complications. In my opinion, chronic corticosteroid therapy in HWI to reduce pulmonary vascular lesions is contraindicated.
Heartworm Infection versus Heartworm Disease
- Heartworm infection indicates that the patient is parasitized by at least one life stage of the heartworm. Animals with HWI typically have no radiographic or clinical signs of disease.
- Heartworm disease affects patients with HWI. These animals manifest radiographic and/or clinical signs of HWD.
CORTICOSTEROIDS IN DOGS WITH HEARTWORM DISEASE
Therapeutic Use For Pulmonary Complications
Allergic pneumonitis (pulmonary infiltrate with eosinophils, eosinophilic pneumonitis), thought to result from microfilariae destruction in the lungs, is very steroid-responsive. It is characterized by cough and variable dyspnea, interstitial to alveolar pulmonary infiltrates on radiographs, and eosinophilic airway cytology.
- Prednisone or prednisolone (1 mg/kg Q 24 H) is administered for 3 to 5 days and discontinued or tapered as clinical conditions allow.1,2,8
- Prednisone/prednisolone tapering has been advocated at:
- 0.5 mg/kg Q 12 H to complete the first week of treatment
- 0.5 mg/kg Q 24 H the second week
- 0.5 mg/kg every other day for the third and fourth weeks.
The response is generally favorable, but it may be necessary to treat for a more protracted period of time if recrudescence of cough and/or tachypnea/dyspnea is noted upon tapering. If anti-inflammatory treatment is needed for an extended time, I suggest administration Q 48 H as long as clinical signs can be kept in abeyance. Typically, such extended therapy is not necessary.
Eosinophilic granulomatosis, a more serious but rare manifestation of HWD responds less favorably to prednisone. It is characterized by a more organized, nodular eosinophilic inflammatory process, associated with bronchial lymphadenopathy and, occasionally, pleural effusion.2,8,9Â With pulmonary granulomatosis, cough, wheezes, and pulmonary crackles are often audible; when HWD is very severe, lung sounds may be muffled and associated with dyspnea and cyanosis.
Treatment with prednisone at twice the dosage for allergic pneumonitis is reported to induce partial or complete remission in 1 to 2 weeks.
- The prognosis remains guarded because recurrence within several weeks is common.
- Prednisone may be combined with cyclophosphamide (50 mg/m2 PO Q 24 H for 4 days for dogs; ensure adequate diuresis due to risk of sterile cystitis) or azathioprine (1.65–2.2 mg/kg PO Q 24–48 H for dogs) in an effort to heighten the immunosuppressive effect. The latter combination appears to be the most effective.
- Adulticide therapy should be delayed until remission is attained.
- Because the prognosis for medical success is guarded, surgical excision of lobar lesions has been advocated.8,9
Pulmonary thromboembolism (PTE), an acute lung injury, usually follows administration of adulticide, typically by 7 to 21 days as adult worms die and disintegrate. This is particularly true if the dog is allowed to exercise during the first 30 to 45 days after treatment. PTE also occurs unrelated to adulticidal treatment, presumably due to spontaneous worm death.
Prednisone (1 to 2 mg/kg Q 24 H) has been advocated, along with cage rest, oxygen if needed, and supportive care, in the management of PTE; therapeutic care is continued until radiographic and clinical improvement is noted.4,10
When using corticosteroids in dogs with PTE, note the following cautions:
- Due to the potential for steroid-induced fluid retention (mineralocorticoid effect), such therapy should be used cautiously in the presence of heart failure or impending heart failure.
- PTE may precipitate heart failure by structural and functional occlusion of pulmonary arteries (the latter due to resultant vasoconstriction), contributing to elevated pulmonary artery pressures and right ventricular afterload.
- Early studies demonstrated that postadulticidal corticosteroid therapy reduced pulmonary blood flow and made intimal disease worse in a model of HWI.6Â Corticosteroids are procoagulant, possibly more so when used in conjunction with adulticides, therefore potentially exacerbating pulmonary thromboembolism.4,8
Indications for Corticosteroid Therapy in Dogs with Heartworm Disease
- To treat pulmonary parenchymal complications:
- Pulmonary eosinophilic infiltrates
- Eosinophilic granulomas
- Pulmonary thromboembolism (spontaneous or postadulticide)
- To prevent or treat adverse reactions to treatment:
- Minimize or prevent adverse reactions to microfilaricidal therapy with macrocyclic lactones
- Minimize or prevent adverse reactions to adulticides (particularly PTE)
- Reduce local reactions to melarsomine
PREVENTION OF ADVERSE REACTIONS TO TREATMENT
Adverse Reactions to Microfilaricides
Despite the fact that no agent is approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the elimination of microfilaria, microfilaricidal therapy has traditionally been instituted 3 to 6 weeks after adulticide administration.8,11,12Â However, I agree with the protocol now advocated by the American Heartworm Society: Preventives should be instituted at time of diagnosis, with resultant gradual decline in microfilarial numbers.
Macrolides offer a safe and effective alternative to levamisole and dithiazanine, which were historically used for this task. Microfilariae are rapidly cleared with:
- Ivermectin at 50 mcg/kg (approximately 8× the preventive dose)12 or
- Milbemycin at 500 mcg/kg (preventive dose).11
Note that these recommendations represent an extralabel use of ivermectin.
Adverse reactions, the severity of which is likely related to microfilarial numbers, were observed in 6% of 126 dogs receiving ivermectin at the microfilaricidal dose.12Â Dogs less than 16 kg, with more than 10,000 microfilaria/mL blood, were more apt to suffer adverse reactions.8
- Signs included shock, depression, hypothermia, and vomiting.
- With fluid (shock dosage) and corticosteroid (high-dose dexamethasone) therapy, all dogs recovered within 12 hours.
- One fatality, however, was observed 4 days after microfilaricidal therapy.
Similar findings and frequency were reported with milbemycin administration at the preventive dose.11Â Dogs treated with fluid and corticosteroid therapy should be hospitalized and carefully observed.
Administer:
- Benadryl (2 mg/kg IM) plus
- Dexamethasone (0.25 mg/kg IV) or
- Prednisone/prednisolone (1 mg/kg PO 1 H prior to and 6 H after first macrolide dose) prophylactically to prevent adverse reactions to microfilaricidal doses of macrolides.8
Adverse Reactions to Adulticides
Adverse effects of adulticides are primarily related to the risk of pulmonary thromboembolism caused by dead worms. Tapering doses of prednisone can be administered, starting at the time of each melarsomine injection, as follows:
- First week: Prednisone, 0.5 mg/kg PO Q 12 H
- Second week: Prednisone, 0.5 mg/kg PO Q 24 H
- Third & fourth weeks: Prednisone, 0.5 mg/kg PO every other day.
Local Tissue Reaction to Melarsomine
Local inflammation is the most common reaction to an intramuscular injection of melarsomine. This is characterized by pain, swelling, and persistent hard lumps at the injection site, accompanied by muscle stiffness and unwillingness to move.
This inflammation can be minimized by careful injection of the drug deep into the belly of the epaxial muscle. Additionally, a short course of anti-inflammatory doses of corticosteroids, given at the time of injection, decreases the likelihood of a local reaction without affecting melarsomine’s efficacy.
WHAT THE DATA TELL US
Prednisone, the steroid most often prescribed for canine patients1-3Â and prednisolone, which is substituted for use in feline and some canine patients,4-7Â have demonstrated variable results in heartworm-transplant models of HWD. These models evaluated the effect of worm death on the host, using either dead worms4Â or canine recipients that received the arsenical thiacetarsemide.5-7Conflicting results (Table) regarding the effect of corticosteroids on arsenical efficacy and HWD complications, warrant, at the very least, caution when deciding whether to prescribe corticosteroids in an effort to reduce adverse reactions following adulticidal therapy. This is particularly true when using the 2-dose method as the small study showing absence of steroid-induced reduction in melarsomine efficacy used the 3-dose protocol.3
To read more about adulticidal therapy, including 2-dose versus 3-dose methods, read Doxycycline in the Management of Heartworm Disease in the July/August 2012 issue of Today’s Veterinary Practice available at todaysveterinarypractice.com.
Table. Studies of Corticosteroid Use in Heartworm Disease
ADVANTAGES
Corticosteroids diminished the severity of pulmonary eosinophilic infiltrate related to heartworms1,2Â and arteritis and periarteritis induced by dead worms.4,5,7No reduction in melarsomine’s adulticidal efficacy with concurrent steroid therapy has been documented; a small (n = 5) study, using the “split” 3-dose melarsomine regimen and tapering dosage of prednisone, showed a 100% kill rate for transplanted worms.3
LIMITATIONS
Other research demonstrated that corticosteroids worsened inflammatory and proliferative vascular lesions, slowing their resolution and diminishing pulmonary arterial blood flow.6Two studies documented a reduction in adulticidal efficacy when thiacetarsemide was used concurrently with corticosteroids.5,7
CORTICOSTEROID CAUTIONS
Side effects of corticosteroid administration include polyuria/polydipsia, hypercoaguability, immunosuppression, diabetes mellitus, iatrogenic Cushing’s syndrome, psychological changes, muscular wasting, and endocrinologic and dermatologic abnormalities.
Avoiding side effects is important; therefore, corticosteroids should be used at the lowest dosage possible. After successful resolution of the treated problem, they should be discontinued gradually. If the clinical situation does not allow tapering the dosage to zero, using the lowest dosage possible, every other day, is a relatively safe alternative.
HWD = heartworm disease; HWI = heartworm infection; NSAID = nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; PTE = pulmonary thromboembolism
References
- Calvert CA, Losonsky JM. Occult heartworm-disease associated allergic pneumonitis. JAVMA 1985; 186:1097.
- Calvert CA, Rawlings CA. Pulmonary manifestations of heartworm disease. Vet Clin North Am Small Anim Pract 1985; 15:991.
- Dzimianski MT, McCall JW, Mansour AM, et al. The effect of prednisone on the efficacy of melarsomine dihydrochloride against adult Dirofilaria immitis in experimentally infected beagles (abst). American Heartworm Symposium, 2010.
- Atwell R, Tarish JH. The effect of oral low-dose prednisolone on the extent of pulmonary pathology associated with dead Dirofilaria immitis in a canine lung model. Proc Am Heartworm Sym 1995; pp 103-111.
- Rawlings CA, Keith JC, Lewis RE, et al. Aspirin and prednisolone modification of radiographic changes caused by adulticide treatment in dogs with heartworm infection. JAVMA 1983; 182:131-136.
- Keith JC Jr, Rawlings CA, Schaub RG. Pulmonary thromboembolism during therapy of dirofilariasis with thiacetarsamide: Modification with aspirin or prednisolone. Am J Vet Res 1983; 44:1278-1283.
- Rawlings CA, Keith JC Jr, Losonsky JM, McCall JM. An aspirin-prednisolone combination to modify postadulticide lung disease in heartworm-infected dogs. Am J Vet Res 1984; 45:2371-2375.
- Calvert CA, Rawling CA, McCall JW. Canine heartworm. In Fox PR, Sisson D, Moise SN (eds): Textbook of Canine and Feline Cardiology. Philadelphia: WB Saunders, 1999, pp 702-726.
- Confer AW, Qualls CW Jr, MacWilliams PS, Root CR. Four cases of pulmonary nodular granulomatosis in dogs. Cornell Vet 1983; 73:41.
- Rawlings CA, Keith JC, Schaub RG, et al. Post adulticide treatment pulmonary disease and its modification with prednisolone and aspirin. American Heartworm Symposium, 1983.
- Blagburn BL, Hendrix CM, Lindsay DS, et al. Post-adulticide milbemycin oxime microfilaricidal activity in dogs naturally infected with Dirofilaria immitis. Proc Amer Heartworm Sym, 1992, pp 159-164.
- Neer TM, Hoskins JD. Clinical experience with ivermectin used as a microfilaricide and for prophylaxis in the dog. Proc Amer Heartworm Sym, 1989, p 95.
Clarke Atkins, DVM, Diplomate ACVIM (Internal Medicine & Cardiology), is the Jane Lewis Seaks Distinguished Professor of Companion Animal Medicine at North Carolina State University. He is also a member of the Today’s Veterinary Practice Editorial Peer Review Board and American Heartworm Society’s Executive Board. Dr. Atkins received the 2004 Norden Award for excellence in teaching. His research involves canine and feline heartworm disease and pharmacologic therapies for cardiac disease. Dr. Atkins received his DVM from University of California–Davis and completed his internship at Angell Memorial Animal Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts.