⚡ Quick answer: Apoquel (oclacitinib) is considered safe for long-term use in most dogs at the lowest effective dose, with the strongest evidence supporting up to 7+ years of continuous therapy. Routine bloodwork every 6 months and watching for infections is required.
Short answer: Apoquel (oclacitinib) is considered safe for long-term use in most dogs at the lowest effective dose, with the strongest evidence supporting up to 7+ years of continuous therapy. Routine bloodwork every 6 months and watching for infections is required.
🚨 Red flag — call your vet now if: New persistent cough, weight loss, lumps, recurrent skin infections, or fever – these need a same-week vet visit, not a wait.
What you should actually do
- Standard chronic dose is once daily at 0.4-0.6 mg/kg (half the loading dose).
- Recheck CBC + chemistry every 6 months on chronic use.
- Modest infection risk (skin, ear, UTI) – report any new infection.
- No documented increase in cancer rate in long-term safety studies.
- Pair with omega-3 + medicated bathing to reduce overall steroid/JAK load.
The original FDA approval was based on a 16-week study, but Zoetis has since published 18-month and 7-year follow-up data showing stable efficacy and no new safety signals beyond what is on the label. The dogs at most risk for adverse events are those started on Apoquel with an undiagnosed pre-existing infection, an occult neoplasm, or an immune-compromising co-morbidity. That is why a vet exam and basic bloodwork before starting – and every 6 months on chronic therapy – is the standard of care.
If your dog has been on Apoquel for years and is doing well, there is no clinical reason to stop. If you want to reduce the total drug burden, the practical path is dose-minimization (try 0.4 mg/kg once daily instead of 0.6) plus an adjunct like Cytopoint, fatty acids, or a hypoallergenic elimination diet trial.
Dig deeper
- Apoquel dosage calculator (weight + indication)
- Cytopoint vs Apoquel – which is right for your dog
- Itch severity (Pruritus VAS) score calculator
Related questions owners ask
- How much Apoquel can I give my dog?
- Apoquel vs Cytopoint – which is better?
- Can Apoquel cause cancer in dogs?
⚕️ Medical Disclaimer
The information on this page is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace a hands-on veterinary examination. Drug doses depend on your dog’s complete clinical picture, concurrent medications, and the exact product formulation. Always confirm dosing with your veterinarian before administering any medication, and contact a 24-hour veterinary emergency service or animal poison control immediately if you suspect a medication overdose or adverse reaction. Editorial standards: every drug dose published on PuppaDogs is cross-checked against multiple authoritative veterinary references and reviewed by PuppaDogs Veterinary Editorial Team before publication.
⚕️ Medical disclaimer
The information on this page is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace a hands-on veterinary examination. Drug doses depend on your dog’s complete clinical picture, concurrent medications, and the exact product formulation. Always confirm dosing with your veterinarian before administering any medication, and contact a 24-hour veterinary emergency service or animal poison control immediately if you suspect a medication overdose or adverse reaction. PuppaDogs editorial standards: every drug dose published here is cross-checked against multiple authoritative veterinary references and reviewed by the PuppaDogs Veterinary Editorial Team before publication.
















