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Metabolism of aceclofenac in cattle to vulture‐killing diclofenac
Authors:T H Galligan  M A Taggart  R J Cuthbert  D Svobodova  J Chipangura  D Alderson  V M Prakash  V Naidoo
Institution:1. RSPB Centre for Conservation Science, The Lodge, Sandy, Bedfordshire, U.K.;2. Environmental Research Institute, University of the Highlands and Islands, Thurso, Scotland, U.K.;3. Wildlife Conservation Society, Goroka, Papua New Guinea;4. Biomedical Research Centre, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, Onderstepoort, Gauteng, South Africa;5. SAC Consulting Veterinary Services, Janetstown, Thurso, Scotland, U.K.;6. Bombay Natural History Society, Hornbill House, Mumbai, India
Abstract:The nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drug (NSAID) diclofenac is highly toxic to Gyps vultures, and its recent widespread use in South Asia caused catastrophic declines in at least 3 scavenging raptors. The manufacture of veterinary formulations of diclofenac has since been banned across the region with mixed success. However, at least 12 other NSAIDs are available for veterinary use in South Asia. Aceclofenac is one of these compounds, and it is known to metabolize into diclofenac in some mammal species. The metabolic pathway of aceclofenac in cattle, the primary food of vultures in South Asia, is unknown. We gave 6 cattle the recommended dose of aceclofenac (2 mg/kg), collected blood thereafter at intervals for up to 12 h, and used liquid chromatography with mass spectrometry in a pharmacokinetic analysis of aceclofenac and diclofenac in the plasma. Nearly all the aceclofenac administered to the cattle was very rapidly metabolized into diclofenac. At 2 h, half the aceclofenac had been converted into diclofenac, and at 12 h four‐fifths of the aceclofenac had been converted into diclofenac. Therefore, administering aceclofenac to livestock poses the same risk to vultures as administering diclofenac to livestock. This, coupled with the risk that aceclofenac may replace diclofenac in the veterinary market, points to the need for an immediate ban on all aceclofenac formulations that can be used to treat livestock. Without such a ban, the recovery of vultures across South Asia will not be successful.
Keywords:ecotoxicology  Gyps  nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drugs  NSAID  pharmaceuticals in the environment  pharmacokinetics  threats to vultures  vulture declines  amenazas a los buitres  declinació  n de buitres  drogas anti‐inflamatorias no‐esteroidales  ecotoxicologí  a  farmacociné  tica  farmacé  uticos en el ambiente  Gyps  NSAID
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