Risk factors for feline coronavirus seropositivity in cats relinquished to a UK rescue charity

Author:

Cave Thomas A.12,Golder Matthew C.1,Simpson Joyce1,Addie Diane D.1

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Comparative Medicine, Companion Animal Diagnostics, University of Glasgow, Bearsden Road, Glasgow, Scotland G61 1QH, UK

2. Vale Referrals, Stinchcombe, Dursley, Gloucestershire GL11 6AJ, UK

Abstract

Two thousand, two hundred and seven cats from 14 shelters of a major UK cat charity were blood tested for feline coronavirus (FCoV) antibodies. Data was collated on breed, sex, age, number of cats at original location, outdoor access, health status, and time spent in the shelter prior to sampling (range 0 to 4 years). Some cats were also tested for feline leukaemia virus antigen, feline immunodeficiency virus, and Toxoplasma gondii antibodies. The effect of these variables on FCoV seropositivity was explored by multivariable logistic regression. FCoV seropositivity in cats that had spent 5 days or less in a shelter at sampling was significantly associated with a multi-cat origin, cats aged 3 years or less, and Persian breed. Whether pet, stray or feral, health status, indoor/outdoor access, and sex had no significant effect. Overall FCoV seropositivity was associated with time spent in a shelter but this association was not linear. Cats that had spent more than 60 days in a shelter were over five times as likely to be seropositive. This may be the result of a change in husbandry from solitary to communal housing for cats remaining in shelters long term. Rescue of cats for less than 60 days was not associated with a significant increasing risk of seropositivity. Significant variation existed in seropositivity between individual shelters overall and in cats rescued for less than 5 days. These findings may reflect inter-shelter variation in cat husbandry and variation in seropositivity of shelter intake respectively.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Small Animals

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