In 2019, the studies of Dr. Niels Pedersen at UC Davis made GS-441524 the most important molecule in recent feline medicine history. For the first time, a disease that had killed virtually every cat that developed it had a treatment that genuinely worked. This article explains what GS-441524 is, how it acts, how it is used, and what you can expect across the 84 days of treatment.
What GS-441524 is: the molecule behind the cure
GS-441524 is a nucleoside analogue. To understand what that means, it helps to know how the mutated feline coronavirus that causes FIP replicates itself.
The virus needs to copy its genetic material (RNA) to produce new copies of itself. To do this, it uses an enzyme called RNA polymerase, which builds the RNA chain by adding nucleosides — the “building blocks” of RNA — one at a time.
GS-441524 mimics the structure of one of those natural nucleosides. When the viral RNA polymerase incorporates it into the RNA chain instead of the real nucleoside, the chain becomes “blocked” and cannot continue building. Without functional RNA, the virus cannot replicate. Without viral replication, the viral load falls. And when the viral load falls, the cat’s immune system can begin to recover.
The numbers that matter
The studies of Dr. Pedersen, confirmed by hundreds of subsequently published case series, consistently show:
- Cure rate in wet FIP: above 95% with appropriate protocols
- Cure rate in dry FIP: above 90%
- Cure rate in neurological FIP: above 80% with high doses
- Overall cure rate: approximately 92% in real clinical practice
The relapse rate is approximately 10%, and the majority of relapses respond to a second treatment cycle.
How it is given: injectable or oral
Subcutaneous route (injection). The injectable formulation guarantees predictable, direct absorption. Owners learn to administer subcutaneous injections at home — in most cases, this turns out to be simpler than it initially seems.
Oral route (tablets or capsules). In recent years, oral GS-441524 formulations with good bioavailability have been developed. Many owners and vets prefer the oral route for the comfort it provides to both cat and owner.
The choice between oral and injectable depends on veterinary judgment, the cat’s condition, and owner preference. Neither is universally superior.
The standard dose: 4 mg/kg as the starting point
The reference dose established in the original studies is 4 mg/kg of body weight per day. This figure is the starting point, not a fixed rule.
The type of FIP significantly modifies the required dose:
- Wet or dry FIP: the standard 4 mg/kg dose is the usual starting point
- Ocular FIP: doses of 6–10 mg/kg are typically required
- Neurological FIP: doses are significantly higher — frequently 8–12 mg/kg or even more — because the blood-brain barrier makes it difficult for the drug to reach the central nervous system
Your vet will determine the specific dose for your cat. Use our dose calculator as a reference guide, but not as a substitute for veterinary judgment.
The 84 days: why this number cannot be shortened
The treatment lasts 84 continuous days. One of the most frequent and costly mistakes owners make is stopping treatment when the cat already appears completely recovered. Visible clinical improvement can occur well before day 84. But that does not mean the virus has been fully eliminated.
Complete the 84 days. Without exceptions.
Available brands: information without endorsement
The main brands that market GS-441524 for FIP are Mutian, Bova, Lucky Cat FIP, and Anivive. We do not recommend any as “the best” — our position is one of strict impartiality. What we always recommend is purchasing through verifiable sources and with veterinary guidance.
If your cat was just diagnosed and you do not know where to start, start here: step-by-step guide from diagnosis.