Dayton Daily News

FDA eyes possible link between grain-free dog food, heart disease

- By Jan Hoffman © 2018 New York Times News Service

Bison and chickpeas. Wild boar and sweet potatoes. Kangaroo and lentils.

These are just a few of the spectacula­rly popular selections of “grain-free” dog food that have deluged the pet food market in recent years. Dense with exotic proteins, teeming with legumes favored by health-conscious humans, they are promoted as delicious as well as nutritious — better for gluten-sensitive bellies, closer to the ancestral, protein-rich diets of the Yorkie’s savage forebears.

But earlier this month, the Food and Drug Administra­tion announced that it is inves- tigating a link between these diets and a common type of canine heart disease.

The condition is dilated cardiomyop­athy, (DCM), in which the heart weakens and becom ese nlarged. Symptoms include fatigue, difficulty breathing, coughing and fainting. Some dogs can abruptly go into heart failure.

DCM is typically seen in large breed dogs that have a genetic predisposi­tion for it, like Doberman pinschers, Irish wolfhounds, boxers and Great Danes. But CVCA, a prac- tice of 19 veterinary cardiologi­sts in the Baltimore-Washington, D.C. area, alerted the FDA that it has been seeing DCM among other breeds, including golden retrievers, doo- dle mixes, Labrador retriev- ers and Shih Tzus.

The common factor was a diet heavy in peas, lentils, chickpeas and potatoes — car- bohydrates typically intended to replace grains.

Other veterinary cardiolo- gists have also noticed the phe- nomenon. “The first clue for us was when we saw a house- hold with two unrelated miniature Schnauzers with DCM,” said Darcy Adin, a veterinary cardiologi­st who teaches at North Carolina State Universi- ty’s College of Veterinary Medicine. “They were both eating the same boutique, exotic protein, grain-free diet.”

Her team has documented 36 dogs with suspected nutri- tional DCM, including poodles and dachshunds.

The possibilit­y that expensive food, lovingly chosen, could make one’s adored pet devastatin­gly ill is sending shudders through dog owners.

“Don’t panic,” said Martine Hartogensi­s, a veterinar- ian who is deputy director for the Office of Surveillan­ce and Compliance in the FDA’s Cen- ter for Veterinary Medicine.

There are no recalls yet, she said. Millions of dogs happily and safely vacuum up these diets. The number of patients so far is small.

CVCA, the group that contacted the FDA, did a survey of 150 recent cases of DCM. Most of the dogs had been on grain-free diets. Steven L. Rosenthal, a partner, noted thattheyco­uld not rule out other influences, but said that the group now sees 8-12 new DCMcasesam­onththatar­e not associated with genetics.

The FDA has recently received reports of some two dozen additional cases. Three dogs died.

“We don’t want to be alarm- ist,” Hartogensi­s said. “But,” she added, “this is a real sig- nal.”

Researcher­s do not know why these d ietsmaybep­roblematic — whether it’s the absence of grains, the pres- ence of legumes or some- thing else. But Lisa Freeman, a veterinary nutritioni­st and researcher with the Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University, sees this moment as an opportunit­y to view grain-free diets skepticall­y. “Contrary to advertis- ing and popular belief, there is no research to demonstrat­e that grain-free diets offer any health benefits over diets that contain grains ”shesaid.

Grains are an important source of protein and other nutrients in many meatbased pet foods, she continued. “Grains have not been linked to any health problems except in the very rare situation when a pet has an allergy to a specific grain.”

Grain-free canine diets began to gain traction in the wake of the 2007 recalls of pet foods contaminat­ed with melamine from China, indus- try analysts said. By 2011, grainfree dog food accounted for 15 percent of sales in U.S. pet specialty stores or nearly $1 billion. By the end of 2017, it had exploded to 44 percent of the market, or nearly $2.8 billion in sales, and continues to grow, said Maria Lange, an analyst on the pet specialty industry for GfK, the global market research firm.

“Most pets are seen as fur babies ,”shesaid,“soow ners say, ‘Maybe my dog is allergic to grains, so just to be safe, I’ll feed him grain-free.’ But in some ways it’s a marketing ploy to catch the consumer’s eye. “

Bentley, a broad-shouldered, 95-pound golden retriever, had been wolfing down his grain-free pork and squash for years, for which his owners, Tracy and Chris Meyer of Phoenix, Maryland, paid about $80 a month.

“You look at the ingredi- ents: peas, red lentils, green lentils,” Tracy Meyer said. “They were near the top of the list. It looked like some- thing I would eat, so I thought it would be all right.”

When Bentley started back- ing off his food, she thought it was because they had just moved to a new house. She switched flavors, added treats.

“Whether I was up at 5 a.m. or8a .m., he was already awake at the bottom of the bed, pant- ing,” Tracy Meyer recalled. “He started a honking cough. Then his stomach became distended. I took him out one time before going to t hevet’sand he just stopped, had a bowel movement, and fainted, foaming at the mouth.”

At the veterinary emergency room, she was told that Bentley had gone into heart fail- ure. Rosenthal was on duty. He ran Bentley’s levels of taurine, an amino acid essential to a healthy heart that dogs can make on their own. A nor- mal taurine level is more than 200. Bentley’s was 58.

A year and a half later, Bent- ley is b ack to his happy-golucky, goofy self. He has come off a heart medication that can affect ki dney f unction. His appointmen­ts have been pared back. He still takes sup- plements and two other heart drugs. His new diet has plenty of grains. Adin noted that some dogs have improved with diet change, medication and taurine supplement­s. Unlike DCM indogswith­ag enetic predisposi­tion ,shes aid, DCM in dietassoci­ated cases can some- times even be reversed.

The FDA said research has just begun on these uncharacte­ristic cases of DCM. One group, cocker spaniels and golden retrievers, do reveal low taurine levels. Investigat­ors speculate that legumes may interfere with the dog’s ability to make taurine or per- haps absorb it. Joshua Stern, a veterinary cardiologi­st at the University of California, Davis, is tracking 24 golden retriev- ers with low taurine levels who had been on grain-free diets.

But taurine levels in other affected dogs, including mixed breeds, are normal, which puzzles researcher­s. The FDA requested that owners and veterinari­ans take blood and urine samples from affected dogs for comparativ­e analysis.

For now, the pet food industry is holding its breath. Dana Brooks, chief executive of the Pet Food Institute, which represents most pet food manufactur­ers, said in an emailed statem ent:“Whiletheex­act cause of the reported illnesses has not yet been identified, PFI shares the belief that any pet illness should be taken seriously, and we remind pet owners to consult their trusted veterinari­ans with any ques stions about their pet’s heal lth and well-being.”

Some veterinary experts recommend that owners with dogs on such diets review the reasons for doing so with their veterinari­ans. Freeman also suggested that owners watch for early signs of heart disease, including weakness and fainting.

“I know that owners want the very best for their pets, but instead of avoiding grains based on myth,” she said. “I recommend selecting a pet food that contains high-quality ingredient­s, is made by a manufactur­er with strong nutritiona­l expertise and rigorousqu­alityc ontrol, and has the right nutritiona­l profile for the individual pet.”

Both Rosenthal and Adin suggested that owners also peruse recommenda­tions by the Associatio­n of American Feed Control Officials. It does not have regulatory authority, but does promulgate widely recognized standards.

Adin also said that owners might move away from exotic proteins like alligator and kangaroo, whose benefits, compared to tried-and-true chicken and beef, have not been scrupulous­ly evaluated.

Rosenthal feeds his own American bulldog, Eddie, a diet from a mainstream commercial pet food maker that includes grains.

“A lot of people would have qualms because it uses less expensive or nonorganic ingredient­s,” he said. “But we’ve seen dogs thrive on these diets.”

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