Heartworm disease, caused by Dirofilaria immitis, can be lethal in dogs and cats. It is transmitted by mosquitoes, and occurs in many parts of the world. Prevention relies on macrocyclic
lactones. Macrocyclic
lactones used are
ivermectin,
selamectin,
abamectin,
eprinomectin,
milbemycin oxime and
moxidectin, administered at 30-day intervals during the transmission season. Some
moxidectin formulations are long-acting
injectables. In the USA, preventives are recommended throughout the year. Loss of efficacy of macrocyclic
lactone preventives was reported in 2005 and proof of resistance in the USA was published a decade later. Understanding factors which promote resistance is important to maintain control. Factors important for resistance development are discussed. Better, inexpensive tests to confirm resistance are needed.
Infection in animals under
chemoprophylaxis per se does not imply resistance because lack of compliance in preventive use could be the reason. In vivo confirmation of resistance is expensive, slow and ethically questionable. A microfilariae suppression test can be a surrogate test, but requires a high dose of a macrocyclic
lactone and repeated blood microfilaria counts 2-4 weeks later.
DNA single nucleotide polymorphism markers have been successfully used. However, the specific genetic changes which cause resistance are unknown. Surveys to map and follow the extent of resistance are needed. Long acting mosquito repellants and
insecticides can play a useful role. High dose rate formulations of
moxidectin, coupled with mosquito biting mitigation may reduce transmission of resistant genotypes.
Doxycycline, daily for 28 days, as anti-Wolbachia treatment, can reduce transmission and remove adult parasites. However, new classes of heartworm preventives are needed. While any preventive strategy must be highly effective, registration requirements for 100% efficacy may hinder development of useful new classes of preventives. Continued reliance on macrocyclic
lactone preventives, when they do not work against resistant genotypes, will spread resistance, and allow for more disease.