Multiple morbidities in companion dogs: a novel model for investigating age-related disease

Kelly Jin, Jessica M. Hoffman, K. Creevy, D. O'Neill, D. Promislow
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引用次数: 19

Abstract

The proportion of men and women surviving over 65 years has been steadily increasing over the last century. In their later years, many of these individuals are afflicted with multiple chronic conditions, placing increasing pressure on healthcare systems. The accumulation of multiple health problems with advanced age is well documented, yet the causes are poorly understood. Animal models have long been employed in attempts to elucidate these complex mechanisms with limited success. Recently, the domestic dog has been proposed as a promising model of human aging for several reasons. Mean lifespan shows twofold variation across dog breeds. In addition, dogs closely share the environments of their owners, and substantial veterinary resources are dedicated to comprehensive diagnosis of conditions in dogs. However, while dogs are therefore useful for studying multimorbidity, little is known about how aging influences the accumulation of multiple concurrent disease conditions across dog breeds. The current study examines how age, body weight, and breed contribute to variation in multimorbidity in over 2,000 companion dogs visiting private veterinary clinics in England. In common with humans, we find that the number of diagnoses increases significantly with age in dogs. However, we find no significant weight or breed effects on morbidity number. This surprising result reveals that while breeds may vary in their average longevity and causes of death, their age-related trajectories of morbidities differ little, suggesting that age of onset of disease may be the source of variation in lifespan across breeds. Future studies with increased sample sizes and longitudinal monitoring may help us discern more breed-specific patterns in morbidity. Overall, the large increase in multimorbidity seen with age in dogs mirrors that seen in humans and lends even more credence to the value of companion dogs as models for human morbidity and mortality.
伴侣犬的多重发病率:一种研究与年龄相关疾病的新模型
在上个世纪,活到65岁以上的男女比例一直在稳步增长。在他们的晚年,其中许多人患有多种慢性疾病,给医疗保健系统带来越来越大的压力。老年多重健康问题的积累有充分的记录,但其原因却知之甚少。长期以来,动物模型一直试图阐明这些复杂的机制,但收效甚微。最近,由于几个原因,家狗被提出作为人类衰老的一个有希望的模型。狗的平均寿命有两倍的差异。此外,狗与它们的主人密切共享环境,大量的兽医资源致力于对狗的疾病进行全面诊断。然而,尽管狗对研究多重疾病很有用,但人们对衰老如何影响犬种多重并发疾病的积累知之甚少。目前的研究调查了年龄、体重和品种如何影响到英国私人兽医诊所的2000多只伴侣狗的多病变化。与人类一样,我们发现狗的诊断数量随着年龄的增长而显著增加。然而,我们没有发现体重或品种对发病率的显著影响。这一令人惊讶的结果表明,虽然品种的平均寿命和死亡原因可能不同,但它们与年龄相关的发病率轨迹差异不大,这表明发病年龄可能是品种寿命差异的根源。未来增加样本量和纵向监测的研究可能有助于我们辨别出发病率的更多品种特异性模式。总的来说,随着年龄的增长,狗的多重发病率大幅增加,这与人类的情况相似,这更让人相信伴侣狗作为人类发病率和死亡率模型的价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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