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Reply To: read before switching back to grain inclusive
Yes..they do have feeding trials. They can’t put for All Life Stages on their label without feeding trials. Unfortunately feeding trials are also flawed.
How do you reconcile that feeding trials are the best way, imperfect as they are, to determine if a food is nutritionally sound, with the fact that hardly anyone (or their foods) does AAFCO feeding trials? My favorite dog food companies (aka the ones I learned about through your yearly reviews, like Merrick) don’t seem to have any AAFCO feeding trials under their belt.
I’m not trying to question your knowledge or recommendations (because I love both), more just hoping I’m not the only one out there thinking about this stuff so much.
Thanks for your question! Iāve discussed feeding trials in a lot of different articles over the years, and Iām happy there are others āthinking about this stuffā as avidly as I am.
Itās true that in the article you mentioned in your note, I said that the ānutrient levelsā method for establishing the nutritional adequacy of a food was flawed:
“Feeding trials are considered by most veterinary nutrition experts [emphasis added] to be the ‘gold standard’ for proving nutritional adequacy claims ā superior to the ‘nutrient levels’ method of proof. Thatās because itās quite possible for a laboratory analysis to confirm that a food contains the amounts of various nutrients judged to be necessary for maintaining a dog, but for the product, in practice, to fail at that very job.
This is possible because not all nutrients may be in a digestible (‘bioavailable’) form. Most nutritionists agree that feeding trials offer the most reliable confirmation of a foodās ability to deliver nutrients in a form that will benefit the target species.”
However, as Iāve mentioned in many of my other articles on commercial diets, the feeding trial method of establishing nutritional adequacy is flawed, too.
The above-referenced article didnāt assert that feeding trials are the best way to prove the nutritional adequacy of a food. Its purpose was to clarify what feeding trials are, and describe conditions for dogs used in the studies.
In that article, I did call feeding trials āimportantā ā and I still think they are. It absolutely is important to know whether a food that may well be fed to a dog every day for years on end is, in actuality, capable of sustaining dogs over time, without causing gross deficits leading to illness, weight loss, or abnormal blood chemistry.
Iām not going to go so far as to regard them as requisite, however, because they arenāt perfect. For one thing, they really arenāt long enough. Just because a diet can sustain a dog in a laboratory environment for about six months without causing illness or abnormal blood values doesnāt mean it will perform the same way for dogs who may lead a much more active and stressful life, and for years on end.
Also, as I explained in my 2007 dry food review (/issues/10_2/features/Dry-Dog-Food-Review_15897-1.html), foods that acquire the right to use a nutritional adequacy claim based on feeding trials need not be formulated to meet the other standard for nutritional adequacy: the ānutrient levelsā criteria. Here is an excerpt from the 2007 article ā but Iām going to boldface and correct a big mistake I made there:
“Foods that pass feeding trials are not required to contain minimum or maximum levels of any particular nutrients. Therefore, itās possible for a food to sustain dogs long enough to ‘pass’ the trial, but fail to demonstrate an ability (in real-world, long-term use) to promote optimum health. As one example, mineral excesses may take a year or more to cause noticeable health problems, but a food that claims to provide complete and balanced nutrition for adult dogs (a ‘maintenance’ claim) may have passed only a 26-week test.
“There is also an AAFCO feeding trial (at least 13 weeks long) for products intended for dogs during gestation and lactation and another that tests puppy diets (10 weeks). To earn the right to claim nutritional adequacy for dogs of ‘all life stages,’ a food must undergo all three trials sequentially, for a total of 49 (or more) weeks. [Actually, to earn the ‘all life stages’ claim, the food must pass the ‘gestation and lactation’ and then the ‘growth’ (puppy) trials, sequentially, for a total of about 23 weeks. The ‘maintenance’ trial is not actually included.] If it passes, its label can state, ‘Animal feeding tests using AAFCO procedures substantiate that (name of product) provides complete and balanced nutrition for all life stages.’
“Many experts regard the ‘all life stages’ feeding trial as the best proof we have of a foodās ability to perform. But again: Even a year-long [nope, only six-month!] feeding trial may fail to reveal faults that can cause serious health problems if fed as a sole diet for a long period.”
However, as I said in the 2007 article, the ānutrient levelsā claim is flawed, too:
“Foods that meet the ‘AAFCO nutritional profiles’ qualification can lack palatability and/or digestibility. If dogs donāt like the smell or taste of the food, they wonāt eat enough of it to gain its nutritional benefits. Also, the nutrients contained in a product may not be present in a form that the dog can digest. The AAFCO nutrient profiles themselves contain a problem: Not many lay people are aware that the profiles allow for a wide range of values. Far from being some sort of industry ‘standard,’ or offering suggestions for optimum nutrition, they actually offer only broad guidance.”
The fact is, both methods that a company can use to āproveā the nutritional adequacy of a product are flawed. Hereās an excerpt from a 2012 article I wrote about the research conducted by pet food companies (/issues/15_6/features/Pet-Food-Company-Research_20546-1.html):
“Many people consider AAFCO feeding trials as the ‘gold standard’ for confirming the nutritional adequacy of a canine or feline diet. However, because the products that met the ‘feeding trial’ test of nutritional adequacy do not have to meet the ‘nutrient levels’ criteria, there is the possibility that these products may contain excessive, deficient, or unbalanced nutrient levels that may contribute to the development of health problems if fed as a sole diet for periods that are in excess of the testing period. An ideal test would encompass both a feeding trial and meeting the AAFCO nutrient profiles, but no such standard currently exists [emphasis added].”
Veterinarians are taught in vet school (with texts underwritten by pet food companies) that only foods qualified by feeding trials should be fed, ever. And the vast majority of veterinarians believe this. Maybe itās because of all the blood tests a dog in a feeding trial is subjected to . . . But six months! Itās not enough to base a lifetime of feeding on, in my opinion.
Thatās why I donāt say in our pet food reviews that one ought to use the type of nutritional adequacy claim as a selection criteria. I do think, however, that this information is worth knowing āthat dog owners should always keep in mind which test was used to prove the adequacy of their dogsā food as they monitor their dogsā health and condition closely. If itās a āfeeding trialā product ā ask the maker (or better yet, look for yourself) to find out if it DOES meet the ānutrient levelsā standards, or do some nutrient values deviate from the AAFCO Canine Nutrient Profiles? If itās a ānutrient levelsā product, ask the maker what sort of informal feeding trials they use, how long the diet is fed to its test dogs, and what sort of tools are used to monitor or evaluate the dogs used in the trials. Some companies use their employeesā dogs or the dogs in a shelter close to the company headquarters as informal test dogs, but donāt follow up with any sort of health tests. These informal tests really only give the company information about the palatability and digestibility of the product; they donāt address long-term health consequences. But then, neither do the AAFCO-protocol feeding trials, unless you consider six months to be ālong term.ā
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This reply was modified 6 years, 3 months ago by
Patricia A.
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German shepherd allergies
by
Ivey Evans
1 day, 6 hours ago -
Looking for feedback on my dogs diet & supplements
by
A. Hoff
1 day, 6 hours ago -
Need any information on a dog food that has beef, bison, or goat, no potatoes…
by
Colleen Kilbane
1 day, 6 hours ago -
FREE 1lb Prime100 SPD Fresh Roll
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Prime 100
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Acid Reflux
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Sarah S
3 weeks ago
Recent Replies
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Pabloo Escabaros on WHAT is the right food for our dogs?!
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ZHURAVEL ANDRIY on Looking for feedback on my dogs diet & supplements
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