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Faster growth rate in ad libitum-fed cats: a risk factor predicting the likelihood of becoming overweight during adulthood

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 April 2013

Samuel Serisier
Affiliation:
Royal Canin Research Center, Aimargues, France
Alexandre Feugier
Affiliation:
Royal Canin Research Center, Aimargues, France
Claudie Venet
Affiliation:
Royal Canin Research Center, Aimargues, France
Vincent Biourge
Affiliation:
Royal Canin Research Center, Aimargues, France
Alexander J. German*
Affiliation:
Department of Obesity and Endocrinology, Institute of Ageing and Chronic Disease, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK
*
* Corresponding author: A. J. German, fax +44 151 795 6101, email ajgerman@liv.ac.uk

Abstract

In human subjects, the risk of becoming overweight (OW) in adulthood is largely determined early in childhood. However, early-life factors have not been considered for feline obesity. A total of eighty colony cats, fed ad libitum, were studied; various breeds, ages and sex were included, with thirty-six (45 %) being OW and forty-four (55 %) being of ideal weight (IW). The effects of various factors (including age, sex, neuter status, breed (pure v. mixed), mean daily food intake (FI), housing status (indoor with outdoor access v. exclusively indoor) and body weight at 1 year of age (BW1y)) on weight status were assessed. Initial statistical analyses identified BW1y as the main significant variable. Body weight (BW) and FI were then assessed between 1 and 8·5 years of age, with group differences (OW v. IW) noted for BW, which increased significantly with age only in the OW group (P < 0·001). However, no difference in BW (P = 0·17) was noted when BW1y was included as a covariate in the model. FI did not change with age in either group. Finally, given the importance of BW1y, changes in BW from 3 to 12 months were then assessed with BW at 3 months of age included as a covariate. Whereas at 3 months of age, no group difference in BW was observed, a faster rate of weight gain was seen in OW cats. In conclusion, as in human subjects, the rate of growth is a key risk factor for cats becoming OW, although the factors responsible are currently not known.

Information

Type
Behaviour, Appetite and Obesity
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - SA
The online version of this article is published within an Open Access environment subject to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike licence . The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2013
Figure 0

Table 1. Summary data for the eighty cats and their comparison with the forty-two- and sixteen-cat subgroups(Number and percentage; median values and ranges for age, food intake and body weight at 1 year of age)

Figure 1

Table 2. Dietary composition of the basal diet used for the study cats

Figure 2

Table 3. Dietary composition of the 15 % remaining diets used in palatability trials in the study cats(Median values and ranges)

Figure 3

Table 4. Risk factors for overweight in a population of eighty colony cats*

Figure 4

Fig. 1. Body weight assessed, in forty-two colony cats between 1 and 8·5 years of age. Values represent least squares means, while error bars represent sem. The open and filled symbols represent data for cats that were overweight and of ideal weight at 8·5 years of age, respectively. The letters identify significant differences compared with body weight at 1 year of age in the same group (a: P < 0·01; b: P < 0·001) or differences between cat groups (z: P < 0·001). A group–age interaction (P < 0·001) was also identified, whereby body weight increased progressively more in the overweight group than in the ideal weight group.

Figure 5

Fig. 2. Body weight assessed in sixteen colony cats monitored from 3 months to 8·5 years of age. Values represent least squares means, while error bars represent sd. The open and filled symbols represent data for cats that were overweight and of ideal weight at 8·5 years of age, respectively. The letters identify significant differences compared with body weight at 3 months of age in the same group (a: P < 0·05; b: P < 0·001) or differences between cat groups (x: P < 0·05; y: P < 0·01; z: P < 0·001). Both age (body weight significantly greater in older cats) and group (body weight significantly greater in overweight cats) effects were identified.

Figure 6

Table 5. Risk factors for overweight at 8·5 years in sixteen cats followed from 3 months of age*