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. 2025 Jun;18(6):1748-1758.
doi: 10.14202/vetworld.2025.1748-1758. Epub 2025 Jun 27.

Prevalence, risk factors, and zoonotic implications of gastrointestinal parasites in urban cats in Kazakhstan: A cross-sectional multicity study

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Prevalence, risk factors, and zoonotic implications of gastrointestinal parasites in urban cats in Kazakhstan: A cross-sectional multicity study

Lyudmila A Lider et al. Vet World. 2025 Jun.

Abstract

Background and aim: Cats act as reservoirs for various gastrointestinal parasites, including species of significant zoonotic concern such as Toxocara cati, Toxoplasma gondii, and Giardia intestinalis. However, data on the prevalence and risk factors associated with feline endoparasites in Kazakhstan remain limited. This study aimed to determine the prevalence, species diversity, and risk factors of intestinal parasitic infections in urban cat populations across five major cities in Kazakhstan, thereby supporting the One Health framework for the prevention of zoonotic diseases.

Materials and methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted from August 2023 to January 2025, involving 1,301 fecal samples collected from both client-owned and stray cats in Almaty, Astana, Oral, Qostanai, and Shymkent. Standardized Sheather's sugar flotation was used to detect helminth eggs and coccidia oocysts in all samples, while Giardia coproantigen was assessed in 1,256 samples using a commercial immunochromatographic assay (FASTest® CRYPTO-GIARDIA strip test kit, MEGACOR, Austria). Prevalence differences across categories - ownership status, sex, age class, and city - were evaluated using the Chi-squared test, and odds ratios (OR) were calculated to identify significant risk factors.

Results: Overall, 17.7% (230/1,301) of cats were infected with at least one intestinal parasite species. The most prevalent species were Cystoisospora felis (7.2%), T. cati (6.2%), Cystoisospora rivolta (2.0%), and Giardia (6.4%). T. gondii-like oocysts (T. gondii or Hammondia hammondi) were detected in 0.6% of samples. Significant variation in parasite prevalence was observed among cities. Stray cats were significantly more likely to harbor C. felis and C. rivolta. Female cats had higher odds of testing positive for Giardia (OR = 1.8). Infections with T. cati, C. felis, and Giardia showed a significant association with age, with kittens (<6 months) being approximately twice as likely to test positive for these parasites compared to adult cats.

Conclusion: This study represents the first comprehensive assessment of gastrointestinal parasitism in urban cats in Kazakhstan. The detection of zoonotic parasites and identification of significant demographic risk factors underscore the need for enhanced public health strategies, including educational outreach, targeted deworming protocols, and environmental hygiene measures. Future molecular investigations are necessary to differentiate T. gondii from Hammondia hammondi and to genotype Giardia assemblages. Soil surveillance in public spaces is also recommended to assess environmental contamination and potential exposure risk to humans, particularly children.

Keywords: Cystoisospora felis; Cystoisospora rivolta; Giardia duodenalis; Kazakhstan; One Health; Toxocara cati; Toxoplasma gondii-like coccidia; coproantigen detection; fecal flotation; feline endoparasites; gastrointestinal parasitism; helminths; public health risk; risk factors; stray versus owned cats; urban cats; zoonotic parasites.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
A cat defecating in a sandpit at a playground in Astana (Photo: C. Bauer).
Figure 2
Figure 2
Map of Kazakhstan showing the geographical locations of the five cities where fecal samples were collected from cats [the map was generated using ArcGIS 10.3 (https://enterprise.arcgis.com)].
Figure 3
Figure 3
Prevalence (%) of Toxocara cati egg shedding, Cystoisospora felis and Cystoisospora rivolta oocyst shedding, and Giardia coproantigen positivity in client-owned and stray cats from five cities in Kazakhstan, with blue lines representing the respective 95% confidence intervals. p-value indicating the significance level of the differences across the cities (Chi-squared test).

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