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Robenacoxib (Onsior) for Dogs and Cats

  • 326 days ago
  • 11 min read
Robenacoxib (Onsior) for Dogs and Cats

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Robenacoxib (Onsior) for Dogs and Cats: When to Use It, When Not To, and What Actually Matters

Most complications with NSAIDs don’t happen because the drug is dangerous. They happen because the context is wrong.

By Dr Duncan Houston

Quick Answer

Robenacoxib (Onsior) is a COX-2 selective NSAID used in dogs and cats for short-term pain relief, particularly after surgery, and sometimes for longer-term conditions like osteoarthritis under veterinary supervision. It is more targeted than older NSAIDs, but still carries risks to the gastrointestinal tract, kidneys, and liver. Safe use depends on correct dosing, hydration, patient selection, and monitoring.

As a veterinarian, this is a drug I use regularly, but only when the case, the patient, and the risk profile all line up.


How I Think About Using Onsior in Practice

This is where most articles stop short.

When I choose robenacoxib

  • Short-term post-operative pain

  • Cats needing NSAID support

  • Situations where GI tolerance is a concern

  • Cases needing targeted anti-inflammatory action

When I may choose something else

  • Long-term arthritis in some dogs depending on response

  • Cases requiring different dosing flexibility

  • Patients with specific risk profiles

This is not about “best drug.” It is about best fit for the patient.


What Makes Robenacoxib Different

Robenacoxib is a COX-2 selective NSAID.

To simplify:

  • COX-1 protects the stomach, kidneys, and platelets

  • COX-2 drives inflammation and pain

Older NSAIDs block both.

Robenacoxib mainly targets COX-2.

This results in:

  • More targeted pain relief

  • Less disruption to protective pathways in healthy animals

  • Concentration at inflamed tissue

Safer does not mean safe in every situation.


Comparison to Other NSAIDs

Robenacoxib vs Meloxicam

  • Robenacoxib: more COX-2 selective

  • Meloxicam: broader inhibition

  • Use depends on patient and duration

Robenacoxib vs Carprofen

  • Robenacoxib: shorter duration, more targeted

  • Carprofen: commonly used long-term in dogs

No NSAID is universally better. The right choice depends on the case.


What It Is Used For

Primary

  • Post-operative pain control

Secondary

  • Osteoarthritis (off-label in many regions)

Real-world use

  • Surgical recovery

  • Orthopaedic pain

  • Acute injuries

  • Chronic joint disease with monitoring


Dosing Philosophy (What Actually Matters)

  • Use the lowest effective dose

  • Use the shortest effective duration

  • Reassess regularly

Good NSAID use is about minimising exposure, not maximising effect.


Risk Stacking: Where Problems Start

Most complications come from combining risk factors.

Risk increases with:

  • NSAID + dehydration

  • NSAID + illness

  • NSAID + other medications

  • NSAID + age

  • NSAID + underlying disease

Most adverse events are not random. They are predictable.


Cats vs Dogs: Important Differences

Cats

  • More sensitive to drug metabolism

  • Shorter approved duration

  • Less margin for error

Dogs

  • More commonly used long-term

  • Broader dosing flexibility

Cats tolerate less margin for mistake.


Severity Framework: Side Effects

Mild

  • Vomiting

  • Soft stool

  • Reduced appetite

Moderate

  • Persistent GI signs

  • Lethargy

  • Reduced intake

Severe

  • GI bleeding

  • Kidney injury

  • Liver dysfunction

  • Collapse


Signs You Must Act On Immediately

  • Not eating

  • Vomiting

  • Black stool

  • Lethargy

  • Increased drinking

  • Yellowing of gums

Stop immediately and contact your vet.


Before Giving Onsior (Checklist)

  • Is your pet eating normally?

  • Are they hydrated?

  • Any vomiting or illness?

  • Any other medications?

If something is off, pause and reassess.


During Treatment (Daily Monitoring)

Check:

  • Appetite

  • Energy

  • Stool

  • Drinking

  • Behaviour

Early changes are where problems are caught.


Hydration: The Most Important Factor

NSAIDs affect kidney blood flow.

If your pet is:

  • Dehydrated

  • Sick

  • Not eating

Risk increases dramatically.

Hydration is one of the biggest protective factors you control.


Monitoring for Long-Term Use

For extended use:

  • Baseline bloodwork

  • Recheck at 7 to 14 days

  • Ongoing monitoring every few months

We monitor:

  • Kidney function

  • Liver enzymes

  • Tolerance

Monitoring is what makes extended use possible.


What Owners Often Get Wrong

  • “Safer” means no risk

  • Continuing during illness

  • Ignoring early signs

  • Mixing medications

  • Skipping blood tests


Patterns I See Clinically

  • Most complications start subtle

  • Dehydration is a major trigger

  • Long-term use without monitoring causes problems

  • Well-managed patients do very well


What Onsior Will NOT Fix

  • Underlying joint disease

  • Poor body condition

  • Lack of rehabilitation

  • Unmanaged chronic disease

Pain control is not disease control.


Timeline: What to Expect

  • Within hours: pain relief begins

  • 1 to 3 days: peak effect

  • Chronic use: gradual improvement

Side effects:

  • Often within first week if they occur


Case Example

A dog on long-term NSAIDs showed reduced appetite.

Bloodwork showed early kidney changes.

Medication adjusted early.

Outcome:

  • No progression

  • Pain controlled

The difference was monitoring, not luck.


What Will NOT Work

  • Using without vet guidance

  • Ignoring hydration

  • Combining NSAIDs or steroids

  • Skipping monitoring

  • Treating it as risk-free


Practical Action Plan

  1. Confirm indication with your vet

  2. Ensure hydration

  3. Follow dosing exactly

  4. Avoid drug combinations

  5. Monitor daily

  6. Perform bloodwork if long-term

  7. Stop if signs appear


Quick Reference Summary

  • COX-2 selective NSAID

  • Best for short-term pain

  • Used long-term with monitoring

  • Main risks: GI, kidney, liver

  • Biggest modifier: hydration and context


FAQs

Is Onsior safer than other NSAIDs?
It is more targeted, but not risk-free.

Can it be used long term?
Yes, with monitoring and proper case selection.

Should I give it with food?
Either is fine, but food can reduce GI upset.

What if I miss a dose?
Skip and continue. Do not double dose.

Can I combine it with steroids?
No. This significantly increases risk.

What if my pet stops eating?
Stop immediately and contact your vet.

Is it safe for older pets?
Only with careful monitoring and risk assessment.

Do I really need blood tests?
Yes for long-term use. This is how complications are prevented.

What is the biggest risk factor?
Dehydration combined with NSAID use.

Can I stop it suddenly?
Yes, but only after checking with your vet for ongoing pain management.


Final Thoughts

Robenacoxib is a powerful and effective tool when used correctly.

The difference between safe use and complications is rarely the drug itself. It is how well the case is selected, how closely it is monitored, and how quickly small changes are acted on.

This is one of the few areas where small decisions make a big difference.


If your pet is on pain medication or you are unsure about side effects, dosing, or monitoring, the ASK A VET™ app can help you track symptoms and make safer decisions before small problems become serious.

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Vet-Designed & Tested
Adventure-ready
Quality Tested & Trusted