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A Veterinarian- Breeder’s View--Use of OFA & PennHIP
Ray Calkins, DVM
(The following article, reprinted with permission, was taken from the 2008 Canine Breeder's Symposium, sponsored by the Society for Theriogenology and the American Kennel Club Canine Health Foundation. The Society for Therinogenology will be holding another Breeder Seminar on August 29, 2009 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. It will be a one day seminar and you can find more information and registration requirements posted on their website at http://www.therio.org in the near future.)
Canine hip dysplasia (CHD) was first described in 1937 and is the most
common degenerative joint disease (DJD) in dogs. It is present in almost all
breeds and has a world wide distribution. CHD is considered to be a disease of
complex inheritance, and thus the clinical signs may vary from mild to severe. In
the United States, two nonprofit organizations have been formed to diagnose and
grade CHD. Through the use of the results from these organizations,
responsible breeders can reduce the incidence of this costly and debilitating
disease.
The Orthopedic Foundation for Animals (OFA) was founded in 1966. John
M. Olin, an industrialist, sportsman and field trailer is generally credited for its
foundation. He organized the first meeting of veterinarians and breeders to find
ways to limit this disease. This meeting led to the formation of the nonprofit
organization.
The OFA evaluates hip genetics (genotypes) by radiographs of the pelvis
in the “hip extended view”. Three board certified radiologists are randomly
picked from a pool of 20 - 25 specialists. Their subjective opinions as to the
phenotype (the observable physical characteristic that reflects the genetics) of
the hip joint is based on a 9 point evaluation of each hip. The hips are classified
as Normal (Excellent, Good or Fair), Borderline (needing re-evaluation) or
Dysplastic (Mild, Moderate or Severe). OFA will evaluate young animals but will
not certify them as Normal until they are two years of age or older. The OFA
strongly recommends sedation or anesthesia for hip radiographic evaluations.
Submission of hip studies is optional with OFA. Owners may elect not to submit
radiographs of dogs with obvious DJD. Therefore, the OFA data is biased by
evaluating primarily dogs that have the possibility of receiving a normal rating.
At the University of Pennsylvania in 1983, Gail Smith started researching
a technique for the early diagnosis of CHD. This research led to the
establishment of the PennHIP method of predicting the likelihood of a dog
developing DJD of the hip or CHD. In 1994 this technique was licensed to an
outside company and became commercially available. The University of
Pennsylvania regained PennHIP and established nonprofit status for the
organization in November 2002.
PennHIP utilizes three radiographic views of the pelvis to scientifically
evaluate the hip’s phenotype. The hip extended view (the first radiograph and
the same view used by OFA) is evaluated subjectively for degenerative changes
(DJD). Then a “compression film” is taken utililizing a lateral fulcrum to seat the
femoral head as deeply as possible into the socket (acetabulum). The third
radiograph called the “distraction radiograph” requires a special adjustable
device that acts as an interior fulcrum to expand the hip joint to the extent
allowed by the round ligament and joint capsule. These two radiographs are
used to calculate the distraction index (DI) of each hip. The DI is a measurement
of joint laxity. The DI is calculated by measuring the radius of the femoral head
(r) and the magnitude of separation, or the distance between the acetabular and
femoral head centers under distraction (d). DI=d/r [1]. The DI ranges from 0 to
>1.
This procedure can be performed as early as 16 weeks of age and the DI
is considered to be stable throughout the animal’s life. PennHIP utilizes a
network of trained veterinarians and anesthesia is required. All studies are
required to be submitted to PennHIP for evaluation. A database that contains all
studies, tight and lax, gives a truer picture of the hip status for that breed.
Performance Borzois and Greyhounds are two breeds that are recognized
to have an extremely low prevalence of CHD and have uniformly tight hips
(DI<0.3). The mean DI (hip laxity) from canine breeds known to have a high
prevalence of CHD had significantly greater mean DI than Borzois and
Greyhounds. Importantly, tight hipped dogs (DI<0.3) within breeds of dogs
predisposed to DJD had a similarly low (near 0) risk of developing DJD [1].
PennHIP issues a Hip Evaluation Report on each animal giving a
subjective evaluation for DJD of each hip. The objective DI is calculated for each
hip and a laxity profile ranking for the dog is shown on a sliding scale for that
particular breed.
An ideal test for a genetic disease would be one that is 100% at
differentiating genetic normal from abnormal. At this time there is no genetically
based test for the polygenetic disease of CHD. Both OFA and PennHIP evaluate
the phenotypic appearance of the hips on a radiograph to predict the genotype.
These evaluation methods identify true negative individuals (genetically and
phenotypically normal) and true positive individuals (genetically and
phenotypically abnormal). In addition, there are a few false positive individuals;
these are animals with good genes, but who have DJD due to hip trauma.
These animals will fail with both OFA and PennHIP. A more disturbing problem
is the false negative individual with the hip extended view (this is the sole view of
OFA, but only 1 of 3 views obtained for PennHIP evaluation). It has been shown
that this view actually “tightens” the joint capsule which can disguise laxity. In
addition, manipulation of the hip can reduce the observed laxity on the x-ray.
False negatives allow bad genes to remain in the gene pool. Hips that are rated
as normal at two years of age with the hip extended view may develop DJD later
in life.
It has been shown by PennHIP that a “direct comparison of the official
OFA score with DI in a pool of 260 large breed dogs showed that a large
proportion of dogs that had officially passed as excellent, good or fair had DI
scores in excess of 0.3” [1]. Dogs that have passed OFA as excellent or good
may have occult lax hips. Not all lax hips will develop DJD, but laxity is a
predictor of susceptibility to CHD. Knowing the DI of your breeding stock may
answer the question why your “OFA Good” stud dog develops DJD later in life or
why he occasionally produces dysplastic offspring.
The OFA recommends breeding only dogs that received a ‘Normal’ rating
to bitches who also received a ‘Normal’ rating. To get better results in reducing
the incidence of CHD, the OFA recommends breeding ‘Normal’ dogs that come
from ‘Normal’ parents and grandparents, and that breeding ‘Normal’ dogs that
have more than 75% ‘Normal’ siblings will result in more rapid improvement. In
addition, the OFA recommends choosing replacement animals that exceed the
breed average.
PennHip states that to get maximum genetic change, one must breed
ONLY dogs with a DI of less than 0.3. These animals have almost zero chance
of developing CHD. This approach dramatically limits breeder choices and
genetic diversity. Because of this, PennHIP advocates a more moderate
approach—use only animals with hips tighter than the breed’s average as
breeding stock. In this way the breed moves to tighter hips with less chance of
developing CHD over time while maintaining the other desired traits of the breed.
All breeding stock should be evaluated for CHD. Early elimination of high
risk individuals reduces the economic and emotional loss caused by the disease.
Both OFA & PennHIP agree that hip laxity is the major contributing factor leading
to the formation of CHD. PennHIP evaluation at a young age (4 mo - 1 yr) will
allow breeders to concentrate their time and energy on a pup that has a better
than average hip for their breed. Prior to making the decision to breed an
individual dog, a radiograph at two years of age should be taken to detect if DJD
is present. Both OFA and PennHIP make this evaluation. The combination of
early evaluation for laxity by PennHIP and OFA certification at two years of age
will over time improve the hip status of your kennel and breed.
Additional information may be obtained from:
[1] Kapatkin, AS, Fordyce, HH et al. Canine Hip Dysplasia: The
Disease and Its Diagnosis. Compend Contin Educ Vet 24:526-535,
2002.
[2] Kapatkin, AS, Fordyce, HH et al. Genetic Control of Canine Hip
Dysplasia. Compend Contin Educ Vet 24:681-687, 2002.
[3] Keller, G: The use of health databases and selective breeding A
guide for dog and cat breeders and owners, Orthopedic Foundation for
Animals, Inc 4th Edition 2003 .
[4] OFA website: www.offa.org
[5] PennHIP website: www.pennhip.org
Last Updated: 01/07/2009, 10:09 am
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