Excess weight is a major health concern in cats( Reference Scarlett and Donoghue 1 ), with studies suggesting that up to 52 % of the adult cat population are overweight or obese ( Reference Lund, Armstrong and Kirk 2 – Reference Serisier, Feugier and Venet 5 ). Overweight is associated with an increased risk of mortality, predisposes individuals to chronic metabolic disorders, such as diabetes mellitus and hepatic lipidosis, and reduces quality of life through chronic diseases, such as osteoarthritis( Reference Tarkosova, Story and Rand 6 ). Owners seeking advice to support weight management of their pets need clear and accurate advice, as well as access to products that meet all nutritional requirements at the appropriate energy intake. The current National Research Council (NRC) guidelines calculate that energy requirements for adult cats are 100 kcal/kg BW0·67 (418 kJ/kg BW0·67) for normal-weight cats and 130 kcal/kg BW0·4 (544 kJ/kg BW0·4) for heavy cats( 7 ). However, feeding to the current 2006 NRC guidelines may be inappropriate, as a meta-analysis of publications (reported in English and published from 1933 to 2009) indicated that feeding guidelines should be reduced to 77·6 kcal/kg BW0·71 (324·7 kJ/kg BW0·71)( Reference Bermingham, Thomas and Morris 8 ).
Whilst a healthy, stable body weight (BW) may be manageable in adult cats by feeding nutritionally complete diets near to this intake, adjusted by owners to their individual cat requirements by monitoring the body condition score (BCS), owners may also seek advice on an age-appropriate intake through growth and sexual development. This is especially important, as evidence indicates that risk factors for being overweight as an adult include the rate of growth in ad libitum-fed cats( Reference Serisier, Feugier and Venet 5 ), feeding a dry diet and restricted exercise at age 12·5–13 months( Reference Rowe, Browne and Casey 9 ). Furthermore, neutering, often carried out in the first year of life, is also a major significant risk factor for obesity. Studies report that cats have acute changes in intake post-neuter when fed ad libitum, gaining BW and fat mass within 8–12 weeks of neutering( Reference Vester, Sutter and Keel 10 , Reference Alexander, Salt and Thomas 11 ) that may persist throughout the individual's adult life( Reference Backus 12 ). As neutering is often undertaken in the first 7 months, awareness of normal growth and development may be challenging for owners wishing to manage healthy weight in the post-neuter phase.
To offer options to prevent neuter-associated weight gain during growth it is useful to gain an understanding of the different factors that may underpin the post-neuter dysregulation of self-regulated food intake. As oestrogen can reduce dietary energy intake( Reference Cave, Backus and Marks 13 , Reference Wara, Hunsucker and Bove 14 ), the level of sexual maturity at neutering may be particularly important. A study undertaken to assess the total energy requirements (TER) of kittens (15–52 weeks) was used to investigate the impact of neutering and age when neutered on intake and BW. The data from the female kittens are reported and discussed here.
Materials and methods
Animal maintenance and diets
A total of fourteen female kittens were recruited from fourteen litters when aged between 14 and 17 weeks of age to a trial feeding a single batch of a nutritionally complete( 7 ), commercial dry diet formulated to support kittens through growth (Royal Canin Kitten) to 1 year of age (confirmed nutritional composition: moisture 6·1 %, protein 33·4 g, fat 19·2 g, ash 6·9 g, non-fermentable extract 33 g, predicted metabolisable energy 1707·9 kJ/100 g as fed). All kittens were housed in purpose-built, environmentally enriched housing at the WALTHAM Centre for Pet Nutrition, in accordance with the centre's research ethics policy and UK Home Office Regulations and cared for according to WALTHAM kitten guidelines. Kittens were individually fed to maintain an ideal BCS (based on the Size, Health And Physical Evaluation (S.H.A.P.E.™) seven-point scale( Reference German, Holden and Moxham 15 )) and evaluated by a group of trained panellists, with weekly assessments to determine whether any changes in intake were required. Cats had free access to fresh drinking water.
Study design
The kittens were housed together in a single social group, and allocated to one of two groups (seven kittens in each), based on the age at which they were to be neutered. Neutering was performed as part of normal veterinary practice at WALTHAM and occurred at one of two time points, one defined as early (early neutering; EN), at 19 weeks of age and the other, defined as conventional (conventional neutering; CN), at 31 weeks of age. Whilst neutering may occur earlier (6–12 weeks of age), 19 weeks is consistent with a previous study( Reference Alexander, Salt and Thomas 11 ), where cats were fed a dry diet ad libitum. The choice of 31 weeks as a later time point is not a specific ‘conventional’ time but is consistent with neutering following sexual development and was primarily to allow an entire control group for the longest time within current husbandry practice at WALTHAM. One kitten was removed from this study (EN group) at 20 weeks of age for health-associated reasons unrelated to the study.
Food intake (g) was measured after each meal and calculated (amount offered – refused) on a daily basis, and BW (kg) and BCS (seven-point scale) weekly. Spontaneous physical activity levels were assessed (average count for 24 h periods over three consecutive days) using Actical devices (Philips Respironics) attached to the cats’ collars, when cats were 19, 25, 31, 37, 43 and 52 weeks of age.
To ensure kittens were allowed to grow normally, they were offered a ration to ensure excess was offered, with the weekly food ration increased by 10 % if more than 90 % was consumed in any meal in the previous week. A proviso was that the ration was restricted if the kitten was considered to be at risk of going above an ideal BCS, measured weekly. When required, diet intake was reduced in 10 % increments with weekly review by the trained BCS panellists to assess progress, so in practice each cat was managed on an individual basis.
Statistical analysis
A linear mixed-effects model was used to analyse the daily energy intake (kcal/kg BW0·67) and BW (kg) with neuter group, age (in weeks) and their interaction as fixed effects and cat as a random effect. Planned contrasts were performed between EN and CN groups at each week. A family-wise statistical test level of 0·05 was used and estimates are reported as means with 95 % family-wise CI. Statistical analysis was performed using R version 3.2.4( 16 ).
Results
EN kittens gained weight gradually to 38 weeks of age (Fig. 1, TER; left-hand column) but all needed dietary management at some stage. CN kittens’ BW gain slowed from week 24, they weighed less from week 30 (P < 0·05) and had a lower energy intake (kcal/kg BW0·67; P < 0·05) between weeks 24 and 32 (significant in weeks 28, 30–32, P < 0·05; up to 32 (95 % CI 1·8, 61·8) kcal/kg BW0·67 (134 (95 % CI 7·5, 258·6) kJ/kg BW0·67) different in week 28). Following neutering (week 31), with adjustments in accordance with feeding protocol, both the intake and BW increased rapidly (significantly so in intake compared with EN between weeks 36 and 40, P < 0·05; up to 51 (95 % CI (20·7, 80·6) kcal/kg BW0·67 (213 (95 % CI (86·6, 337·2) kJ/kg BW0·67) at week 38). Of the thirteen kittens, eleven had a BCS that required intake restriction at some stage (with two of the EN group requiring restriction pre-neuter) and all cats in the study had an ideal BCS by week 46. The intake differences between neuter groups meant that no single model could be used to derive a TER value for feeding guidelines in female kittens through growth. There were also no significant differences between neuter groups in activity, with both showing a gradual decrease in average activity of about 25 % between 19 and 52 weeks of age (19 weeks, EN: 281 560 (95 % CI 261 244, 302 056), and CN: 289 860 (95 % CI 270 576, 309 143); 52 weeks, EN: 210 141 (95 % CI 185 934, 234 347), and CN: 218 351 (95 % CI 194 539, 242 162)).
Discussion and conclusions
The data are consistent with dietary management being important to maintain an ideal BCS in growing female cats irrespective of age when neutered. Whilst the study is small, the controlled nature of the protocol, with regular assessment of BCS by trained panellists, provides insight into the additional impact of sexual development on weight management in the post-neuter phase. Specifically, cats that were neutered at the later time point showed a rapid post-neuter increase in food intake (also reflected in the more frequent increases in ration post-neuter; data not shown) and BW.
The data presented here support the view that earlier neutering may enable a more gradual weight gain through growth and so aid healthy weight management through growth when regulating intake to maintain an ideal BCS. It is of note that the management to an ideal BCS resulted in kittens weighing an average of 3·4 kg, similar to the average of 3·2 kg achieved by entire female cats fed ad libitum on a similar dry diet in the same environment( Reference Alexander, Salt and Thomas 11 ) (Fig. 1, self-regulated; middle column) and lower than the 4·1 kg average attained by the neutered kittens in that study, also neutered at 19 weeks of age and fed ad libitum throughout the year (Fig. 1, macronutrient profile; right-hand column). The self-regulated study( Reference Alexander, Salt and Thomas 11 ) observed that neutered cats consumed similar energy intakes to entire littermates from 37 weeks of age but continued to gain weight and percentage fat and speculated that reduced activity levels may be partly responsible for this reduced energy requirement. We measured activity in this study and saw no difference between groups at any time point.
A separate study where kittens were neutered at 26 weeks of age and allowed to eat a selection of wet foods differing in macronutrient profile ad libitum appeared to have a gradual weight gain and intake response (AK Hewson-Hughes, VL Hewson-Hughes, R Staunton, SJ Simpson and D Raubenheimer, unpublished results) similar to those of the EN cats (Fig. 1, TER; right-hand panel). These observations, within the context of the other studies (Fig. 1), may be used to hypothesise that kittens neutered after 26 weeks of age and fed a dry diet ad libitum could show more acute increases in consumption, gaining weight more rapidly and becoming overweight before reactive weight-management changes can be employed. These data could be used to hypothesise that the development of oestrogen regulation of energy intake, and its subsequent loss following gonadectomy, could be responsible for driving both the acute hyperphagia and the rapid post-neuter weight gain; further work is required to confirm this.
In addition to the TER study reported here, a parallel TER study in male kittens (also neutered at 19 weeks compared with a control group that remained entire to 31 weeks of age) observed no significant increase in mean average daily energy intake (kcal/kg BW0·67)( Reference Allaway, Gilham and Colyer 17 ). However, following neutering at 31 weeks a significant difference in intake (CN group being greater, up to 36 (95 % CI 9, 62) kcal/kg BW0·67 (151 (95 % CI 38, 259) kJ/kg BW0·67) was observed between the two groups in weeks 34–36 and weeks 38–41, consistent with other reports in adult male cats 2·5–3·6 years of age), where an immediate and significant increase in food intake from 3 to 19 weeks post-procedure was observed( Reference Wei, Fascetti and Kim 18 ). These data may be used to hypothesise that neutering males in the early stages of sexual development may also reduce the likelihood of acute feeding behaviour changes. From a weight management and post-neuter feeding behaviour welfare perspective, neutering at or before 26 weeks irrespective of sex may be beneficial, and provides additional evidence supporting the advantages of earlier neutering alongside the social benefits and lack of evidence of health risks( Reference Spain, Scarlett and Houpt 19 – Reference Joyce and Yates 21 ). However, any recommendation to veterinary practices would require a critical review of all studies describing neuter-related weight gain and consideration within the context of other social and individual veterinary health concerns.
Acknowledgements
We thank our colleagues at the WALTHAM Centre for Pet Nutrition for their expert care of the cats that participated in this study. We also thank AK Hewson-Hughes for generously sharing unpublished data presented in Fig. 1.
The work was funded by, and authors employed by, Mars Petcare UK.