The Daily Telegraph

Covid got its claws into 350,000 cats, study finds

First research calculates just how widespread coronaviru­s was among felines during pandemic

- By Joe Pinkstone SCIENCE CORRESPOND­ENT

MORE THAN 350,000 cats in Britain caught Covid over the course of the pandemic, a study suggests.

Cats have previously been shown to catch coronaviru­s but the level of infection among domesticat­ed felines has not been calculated before.

Virologist­s and veterinari­ans from the University of Glasgow analysed swabs from 2,309 cats that were taken to vets in the UK between April 2020 and February 2022 for routine check-ups.

Samples came from across the UK and were “broadly representa­tive of the domestic cat population”, the scientists write in their paper, which is not yet peer-reviewed and is published as a pre-print.

The team found that 3.2 per cent of all the samples were positive for Covid antibodies, with the highest levels of infection occurring at the end of 2021 and at the start of 2022, with one in 20 cats testing positive.

There are believed to be around 11million pet cats in the UK, according to the Cats Protection 2022 report, with 3.2 per cent equating to 352,000 cats having Covid.

“We looked at over 2,000 samples, and we are confident in saying that over three per cent of the UK’S cat population has been exposed to Covid and mounted a neutralisi­ng response, and this has been increasing,” study author Grace

Tyson, a PHD student at the Mrcunivers­ity of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research, told The Daily Telegraph.

However, she added that this is likely to be an underestim­ate because the method they used only tested for a specific form of antibodies.

“Cats that still became infected but did not produce particular­ly strong/ effective antibody responses will not have been captured in this study, so it is likely that the number of UK cats exposed to Covid is greater than the 3.2 per cent we found here,” Ms Tyson said.

There has been one documented case of a person catching Covid from an infected cat, when a 10-year-old tabby living in Thailand caught the virus off its infected owners and then sneezed in the 32-year-old vet’s face while being swabbed.

The cat’s owners, a father and son, were sent, with their cat, to a hospital 560 miles away from their Bangkok home. The cat was tested and treated at a nearby vets while the owners were put into hospital isolation.

The cat caught the virus after sleeping on the owners’ beds and the vet wore a mask and gloves, indicating the virus may have infected her via her eyes during the 10-minute appointmen­t. Both the animal and human patients made a full recovery.

Experts say cats do not shed much virus and are only infectious for a couple of days, making it much harder for them to infect someone than it is for a person.

The latest data give an indication as to how widespread Covid-infected cats were and has raised concerns about the virus’s impact on their health as well as the animals becoming a reservoir of disease where new variants may evolve before jumping back into people.

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