| Literature DB >> 27169845 |
Vicki Jean Adams1, Penny Watson2, Stuart Carmichael3, Stephen Gerry4, Johanna Penell5, David Mark Morgan6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to describe the longevity and causes of mortality in 39 (12 males, 27 females) pedigree adult neutered Labrador retrievers with a median age of 6.5 years at the start of the study and kept under similar housing and management conditions. Body condition score was maintained between two and four on a 5-point scale by varying food allowances quarterly. The impact of change in body weight (BW) and body composition on longevity was analysed using linear mixed models with random slopes and intercepts.Entities:
Keywords: Ageing; Body fat mass; Body weight; Exceptional longevity; Healthcare; Healthspan; Husbandry; Lean body mass; Nutrition; Sarcopenia
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27169845 PMCID: PMC4863359 DOI: 10.1186/s13028-016-0206-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Vet Scand ISSN: 0044-605X Impact factor: 1.695
Evidence used in consensus for ‘Typical’ Labrador retriever lifespan based on reported ages at death with reference numbers in square brackets
| Reference material | Country | #Dogs | Median lifespan, years |
|---|---|---|---|
| Assistance dog databasea | US | 498 | 12.0 |
| Lawler et al. [ | US | 48 | ‘Restricted’ group: 13.0 |
| Kealy et al. [ | ‘Control’ group: 11.2 | ||
| Adams et al. [ | UK | 574 | 12.25 |
| O’ Neill et al. [ | UK | 418 | 12.5 |
| Michell [ | UK | 328 | 12.6 |
| Proschowsky et al. [ | Denmark | 199 | 10.5 |
| Typical lifespan of Labrador retrieversb | 12.0 | ||
aCanine companions for independence (Santa Rosa, CA, USA)
bConsensus age provided by Jan Bellows, DVM, DAVDC, DABVP, FAVD; Carmen M. H. Colitz, DVM, Ph.D., DACVO, Donald Ingram, Ph.D.; Stanley L. Marks, BVSc, Ph.D., DACVIM, DACVN; Sherry L. Sanderson, DVM, Ph.D., DACVIM, DACVN; Julia Tomlinson, BVSc, Ph.D., DACVS, CCRP, CVSM
Fig. 1Flowchart of dogs recruited to the study and included in the analysis. MH mannoheptulose
General ingredient and nutrient composition of the control and study diets
| Ingredient composition | Analysis % | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control dieta | Study dietb | Nutrientf | Control | Study | |
| Maize | Chicken meal | Egg product | Protein (%) | 25.1 | 24.7 |
| Chicken by-product meal | Chicken by-product meal | Brewer’s yeast | Fat (%) | 13.8 | 15.0 |
| Maize gluten meal | Maize | FOSc | Fibre (%) | 2.1 | 2.1 |
| Soybean meal | Sorghum | sHMPd | Ash (%) | 5.3 | 7.0 |
| Animal fat | Barley | Linseed | Moisture (%) | 7.8 | 7.5 |
| Palatant | Chicken fat |
| Vitamin E (IU/kg) | 163 | 328 |
| Minerals | Fishmeal | Minerals | β-carotene (ppm) | 2.9 | 39 |
| Vitamins | Palatant | Vitamins | GEg (kcal/kg) | 4716 | 4695 |
| Beet pulp | Othere | 6:3 fatty acidsh | 19:1 | 9:1 | |
aThe control diet was nutritionally complete and balanced and formulated to be representative of a mid-tier adult dog food product
bStudy diet was formulated to contain the same nutritional technologies found in the Eukanuba nutritional matrix for senior dogs (Eukanuba® Senior Maintenance Dog Food. For the study period reported this product was owned and manufactured by Procter & Gamble, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA)
cFructo-oligosaccharide
dSodium hexametaphosphate
eAvocado juice concentrate (<0.10 %) was included in the diet matrix for 19 dogs
fNutrient composition is actual laboratory analytical results expressed on as-fed basis
gGross energy
hRatio of dietary omega-6 fatty acids and omega-3 fatty acids
Fig. 2Polynomial smooth plots of average body weight (lines) with 95% confidence intervals (CI, gray shaded areas) by age for each longevity group of dogs. The starting point for each line is the average body weight for those dogs which were in the acclimatisation period at that age on 01 July 2004 just before the study started. The end point for each line is the average body weight for those dogs which died or were censored (N = 5 in the Exceptional group) at that age at the censor date of 31 July 2014. These plots show that the Expected dogs (blue line) started at a low weight, then put on about 1 kg/year until reaching a peak at 11 years of age and this was followed by a decline of ~1.7 kg in 2 years. The Long-lived dogs (green line) started at a higher weight, then stayed at a rather stable weight before showing an increased weight over to reach a peak at 10 years of age and then the weight declined at ~1 kg/year. The Exceptionally long-lived dogs (gray) started at the lowest weight (but at an older age) and they put on weight gradually to reach a peak at 12 years of age, then slowly declined to reach a low point at 16 years before putting on some weight again
Mean ages and body weights for the three longevity groups of dogs in July 2004
| Longevity category | N | Mean body weight (kg) | SD | Min–max | Mean age (years) | SD | Min–max |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Expected (≥9 to ≤12.9 years) | 13 | 29.4 | 4.6 | 20.2–37.40 | 6.5* | 0.6 | 5.3–7.6 |
| Long (≥13 to ≤15.5 years) | 15 | 29.4 | 4.3 | 21.1–41.4 | 6.4# | 0.9 | 5.4–7.9 |
| Exceptional (≥15.6 years) | 11 | 26.8 | 3.7 | 19.2–33.1 | 7.4*# | 0.8 | 6.0–8.5 |
Means among longevity groups were compared using analysis of variance with post hoc pairwise comparisons; mean body weights were not significantly different (P = 0.36) whilst means within the age column that share an asterisk (*) or a hash (#) were significantly different (P = 0.01)
N number of dogs, SD standard deviation, Min–max range from minimum to maximum values
Number of Labrador retrievers, age at death/censor date and median survival time with 95 % CIs
| Longevity category | Descriptive statistics for age in years at death/censor datea | MST (95 % CI) in years from Kaplan–Meier analysis | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N (%) | Mean (SD) | Median (min–max) | |||
| Expected ≥9 to ≤12.9 | Deceased | 13 (33 %) | 12.08* (1.04) | 12.58* (9.68–12.95) | 12.44* (11.70–12.80) |
| Long ≥13 to ≤15.5 | Deceased | 15 (39 %) | 14.21* (0.58) | 14.15* (13.18–15.19) | 14.08* (13.63–14.72) |
| Exceptional ≥15.6 | Deceased | 6 | 15.98 (0.49) | 15.80 (15.68–16.96) | |
| Alivea | 5 | 16.82 (0.65) | 17.13 (16.04–17.50) | ||
| Sub-total | 11 (28 %) | 16.36* (0.69) | 16.04* (15.68–17.50) | 16.47* (15.76–NE) | |
| Overall | Overall | 39 (100 %) | 14.11 (1.86) | 14.01 (9.68–17.50) | 14.01 (13.18–14.77) |
Within each column (mean, median, MST), values which share an asterisk (*) are each significantly different from one another (P < 0.0001) by parametric and non-parametric analysis of variance for age at death/censor date and by Kaplan–Meier survival analysis; values within a column with no asterisk were not compared
CI confidence interval, NE not estimated using Statistix commercial software
aJuly 31, 2014
Fig. 3Kaplan–Meier survival plot for 39 Labrador retrievers in three lifespan groups. Expected (blue): 13 dogs; Long (green): 15 dogs; and Exceptional (gray): six deceased and five dogs remaining alive as of the July 31, 2014 censor date
Cause of death for 34 dogs by gender and lifespan category as of 31 July 2014
| Cancer | Expected: ≥9 to ≤12.9 years | Long: ≥13 to ≤15.5 years | Exceptional: ≥15.6 years | Total | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | 3 = | Haemangiosarcoma | 3 = | Plasma cell tumour | 2 = | Haemangiosarcoma | 8 |
| Male | 4 = | Haemangiosarcoma | 1 = | Urinary tract cancer | 0 | 5 | |
| Sub-total | 7 (54 %) | 4 (27 %) | 2 (33 %) | 13 (38 %) | |||
| Other | |||||||
| Female | 4 = | Intervertebral disc disease | 7 = | Gastric dilatation volvulus | 4 = | Osteoarthritis (2) | 15 |
| Male | 2 = | Osteoarthritis | 4 = | Found deceased in kennel (enteritis, colitis and PLE)b
| 0 | 6 | |
| Sub-total | 6 (46 %) | 11 (73 %) | 4 (67 %) | 21 (62 %) | |||
| Total | 13 (100 %) | 15 (100 %) | 6 (100 %) | 34 (100 %) | |||
33 dogs underwent euthanasia due to deteriorating quality of life and one dog found dead in the morningb
aHistopathology revealed inflammatory process in kidney indicating chronic infection (asymptomatic)
bPost-mortem examination revealed enteritis and colitis with evidence of protein-losing enteropathy and mild multifocal glomerulosclerosis
cHistopathology revealed inflammatory changes in gastro-intestinal tract
Body weight change (slope) for three age categories of Labrador retrievers up to death/censor date 31 July 2014
| Longevity category | Up to 9 years | 9–13 years | After 13 years | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | Mean (in kg/dog/year) | SEM | N | Mean (in kg/dog/year) | SEM | N | Mean (in kg/dog/year) | SEM | |
| Expected (≥9 to ≤12.9 years) | 13 | 0.59 | 0.3 | 13 | −0.15 | 0.31 | N/A | ||
| Long (≥13 to ≤15.5 years) | 15 | 0.52 | 0.28 | 15 | −0.91* | 0.28 | 15 | −1.41 | 0.68 |
| Exceptional (>15.6 years) | 11 | 0.4 | 0.36 | 11 | 0.53* | 0.32 | 11 | −1.31 | 0.74 |
Means within the 9–13 years column which share an asterisk (*) are significantly different (P = 0.007); none of the means within the other two columns (up to 9 years, after 13 years) show any significant differences among them (P > 0.05)
N number of dogs, SEM standard error of the mean
Results of linear mixed regression for average changes in body composition determined by DEXA scans performed annually up to 13 years of age
| DEXA variable | Longevity category | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Expected (≥9 to ≤12.9 years) | Long (≥13 to ≤15.5 years) | Exceptional (≥15.6 years) | |||||||
| N | Meana | SEMb | N | Meana | SEMb | N | Meana | SEMb | |
| Total fat mass (g) | 13 | 1000* | 165 | 15 | 320* | 152 | 11 | 625 | 170 |
| Total lean mass (g) | 13 | −593 | 127 | 15 | −461 | 80 | 11 | −269 | 165 |
| Body fat (%) | 13 | 2.69*# | 0.35 | 15 | 1.25* | 0.31 | 11 | 1.55# | 0.36 |
| Body lean (%) | 13 | −2.69*# | 0.33 | 15 | −1.31* | 0.29 | 11 | −1.58# | 0.34 |
| Fat:Leanb | 13 | 0.06*# | 0.01 | 15 | 0.03* | 0.01 | 11 | 0.04# | 0.01 |
| Total BMC (g) | 13 | 10 | 3.2 | 15 | 18 | 3.1 | 11 | 16.6 | 3.2 |
| Total BMD (g) | 13 | 0.0061*# | 0.0022 | 15 | 0.0123* | 0.0019 | 11 | 0.0131# | 0.0024 |
Means within a row that share an asterisk (*) or a hash (#) are significantly different (P < 0.05); means within a row with no asterisk or hash are not significantly different (P > 0.05)
DEXA Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometer scans obtained using DXA Model Delphi-A, Serial No. 70852; Bedford, MA, USA
N number
a Means and standard errors of the mean (SEM) for changes in body composition (slope) as g/dog/year or %/dog/year up to 13 years
b The fat to lean ratio was determined as total fat mass (g)/total lean mass (g)
Energy intake of Labrador retrievers in the current study and a previous calorie restricted study
| Average daily intake of energyb | Current study | Calorie ‘restricted’ groupa | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Expected | Long | Exceptional | ||
| MJ/day | 5.88 | 5.84 | 5.56 | 5.15 |
| kcal/day | 1405 | 1397 | 1329 | 1230 |
| Energy intake kcal/kg/day | 46.2 | 46.2 | 48 | ≈46.5 |
aGroup of Labrador retrievers fed 25 % less than their ‘Control’ fed pair; Kealy et al. [19, 25] and Lawler et al. [2]
bMetabolic energy of the test diet fed was 3669 kcal/kg based on a Modified Atwater calculation