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RESEARCH PROJECT 2 REPORT FRONT COVER SHEET Candidate number: S425 RP2 project title: Prevalence and risk factors for patellar luxation (PL) in dogs attending veterinary practices in England Date and time of submission: Number of pages: 18 pages (including this one) Word count: 3963 In signing this Front Cover Sheet, I confirm that: This submission is my own work, except where clearly indicated. This hard copy is identical to the version submitted via Turnitin™. The Overall Similarity Index (OSI) for this piece of work is 13% I have read the RP2 Guidelines document, General Assessment Regulations and the Student Assessment Policy. I understand and agree to abide by the University’s regulations. Signed: 1|Page Contents Abstract… 3 Abbreviations… 4 1.0 Introduction…5 1.1 Overview…5 1.2 Importance of Patella luxation…5 1.3 Current data analysis…5 1.4 Anatomy and physiology …6 1.5 Diagnosis…7 1.6 Study Aim…7 2.0 Methods and materials …8 3.0 Results…10 3.1 Risk Factor – Adult Breed size associations…10 3.2 Risk Factor- Breed classification associations…10 3.3 Risk Factor- Gender associations…10 3.4 Risk Factor- Age associations…11 Table of results…12 4.0 Discussion…13 4.1 Data Analysis of hypothesis…13 4.2 Risk Factors of PL…13 4.2.1 Association of breed…13 4.2.2 Influence of gender…14 4.2.3 Influence of age…14 4.2.4 Insurance status of affected patients…14 4.2.5 Limb association…15 4.3 Limitations of study…15 5 Conclusion….16 References…17 2|Page Prevalence and risk factors for patellar luxation (PL) in dogs attending veterinary practices in England Abstract Patella luxation is a common orthopaedic condition of the canine, characterised by either medial or lateral displacement of the patella out of the patella sulcus. This study aimed to elicit a prevalence and common risk factors associated with patella luxation in England. Primary veterinary care data obtained from the VetCompass Animal Surveillance Project and was used for this study. Prevalence was estimate from the overall canine cohort, associated risk factor analysis used a case-control design with univariable logistic regression. There were 849 cases of patella luxation verified case, from 2836 clinical recorded out of 6,334 potential cases identified from 235,384 dogs attending 120 practices from the study period September 1st 2009 and August 31st 2014. Cases were aged 2 months to 17 years at age if diagnosis. 54.5% of cases and 48.1% of controls were female, 79.95% of case and 79.4% of controls were purebreds. The apparent prevalence was 0.8% (95% CI 0.77–0.84%), with the estimated prevalence in small breed 4.03% (95% CI 3.28-4.95%). Yorkshire Terrier (OR 3.75, (95% CI 2.49-5.63, p= <0.0001), Cavalier King Charles (OR 4.00, (95% CI 2.16-7.40, p= <0.0001), and Pomeranian (OR 5.25, (95% CI 1.79-15.4, p= <0.0001), Small breed (OR 2.27 95% CI 1.91-2.71) and dogs of 1-2 years if age (OR 1.45 95% CI 1.12-1.89) were all at increased odds of patella luxation. This study highlights patella luxation as a prominent canine disease in England and reports increased odds of diagnosis in certain breeds and sizes of dogs. 3|Page Abbreviations CI – Confidence interval DoB – Date of Birth EPR - electronic patient records IQR –Interquartile range PL- Patellar Luxation PMS – Practice management system OR – odds ratio DoB – Date of Birth YER -years 4|Page 1.0 Introduction 1.1 Overview Patellar luxation (PL) is a common condition of the dog, being the seventh most commonly diagnosed orthopaedic disorder 1. Patella luxation is also considered one of the most important hereditary defects of the domestic canid 2, however the mode of inheritance is yet unknown3 nor has the mechanical mechanism be truly elucidated 4 Recent studies have suggested that the luxation occurs due to skeletal limb abnormalities that effect the whole stifle extensor mechanism5. It is accepted that a luxated patella is defined as ‘a displacement of the patella from the trochlear sulcus’ 6. 1.2 Importance of patella luxation Although it’s been reported that dogs with congenital PL seldom feel pain or develop degenerative joint disease7, a recent Belgium study of 141 dogs demonstrated gross cartilage erosions. An intra-operative assessment was made and crossed with 13 digitally captured and analysed photographs before being assigned a grade. Each grade demonstrated dogs with areas of erosion, and an increase in grade was correlated to an increase in cartilage erosion.8. Further pathology is often associated with patients suffering from chronic medial patella luxation, the anatomical abnormalities increase the strain on the cranial cruciate ligament in the stifle that may lead to ligament rupture4. 1.3 Current data analysis Data is limited on the frequency of patella luxation, with studies reporting in different ways, such as on breed prevalence, or percentage of dog’s affected and relative risk, a 2009 UK study demonstrates the Labrador at 21% to be the most commonly affected breed from a study of 155 dogs with 92% of cases medial. 9 Another recent study of PL in Thailand, showed that the medial and lateral luxation prevalence was 87% and 13% respectively in affected small dogs 3. An incidence study performed in South Korea between 2000-2005 experienced medial and lateral luxation in 95% and 5% of cases respectively. Sixty nine percent of affected patients met the study criteria for ‘small breed’10. Predispositions have been mainly reported in small breeds such as the Pomeranian, Chihuahua, Boston Terrier, Miniature Poodle and Yorkshire Terrier11 . Pomeranians seem to be particularly affected in the USA with 42.4% of the population affected3. Denny (1985) also reported Cavalier King Charles spaniels to be more at risk. Recent studies have reported predispositions specifically in larger breeds, with the Labrador Retrievers and Staffordshire Bull Terriers being 5|Page more at risk 12. Furthermore a study performed by W.Prister in USA and Canada, between 1964 and 1969, concluded that small breed dogs in general are 12 times more likely to suffer from medial PL. However the study failed to compare affected dogs against the non-affected population and obtain a perspective of the size of dogs owned during the study period. The study observed 542 clinically affected dogs, of these females were 1.5 times more likely to be effected in one study 2. The median age has been reported for lateral PL cases based upon the grading of the disorder, put grade I PL at 16.5 months, II 12 months, III 7 months, IV 6months. A younger diagnosis correlated with a more server grade of PL. The majority of cases were recorded at 12 months of ages at grade II13. Other reports stat that the abnormalities of the stifle progress with age along with the degree of luxation14. Foremost PL is classified as a congenital disorder 12,14,15. The role of oestrogens has also been suggested in having a pathological role. Experimental induction of oestradiol causes development of a shallower trochlear sulcus, thus propagating the idea that patella luxation may be partly under hormonal control16. Moreover this could also explain, why females were 1.5 times more likely to be affected 2. 1.4 Anatomy and pathophysiology PL is associated with several anatomical abnormalities including, coxofemoral joint conformation; shallow trochlear groove; femoral torsion and angulation; deviation of the tibial crest; and tibial torsion (see figure 1). Many of these abnormalities are involved in the stifle extensor mechanism5, thus suggesting that misalignment of the quadriceps mechanism along No. Location Abnormality 1 Trochlear sulcus Shallow trochlear groove 2 Tibial diaphysis Tibial torsion medial or laterally 3 Tibial crest Deviation of the tibial crest 4 Femoral angulation Angle of inclination femoral neck 5 Femora diaphysis femoral torsion medial or laterally Figure 1- Visually highlights the anatomical abnormalities associated with PL, according to with a shallow sulcus may be anthe important factorplanes in patella luxation17 . previous data. trochlear The arrowed demonstrate approximate of rotation, torsion or site of deviation. 6|Page 1.5 Diagnosis PL is characterised by either medial or lateral displacement of the patellar, which is either permanent or intermittent, giving rise to Singletons 4 tier grading system: Grade I: Intermittent Patella luxation, can be manually luxated but returns to normal on its own; Grade II: Frequent luxation associated with 15-30⁰ tibial crest deviation; Grade III: Permanent luxation associated with 30-60⁰ tibial crest deviation; Grade IV: Permanent luxation associated with 60-90⁰ tibial crest deviation7. Radiographical assessment can also be performed to evaluate PL, whereby mediolateral views of both femurs and ventrodosal projections of the pelvis to the bottom 1/3 of the tibia have been described 11. 1.6 Study aim The majority of texts relating to PL draw on methods of surgical correction and diagnostic imaging. Despite epidemiological reports that study the prevalence of patella luxation, the author can find no recent controlled studies of the population in England. The current study aims to evaluate the prevalence of PL and evaluate the associations of the possible risk factors of breed, size, and gender predispositions from a study control population from English first opinion practice. It was hypothesised that smaller breed dogs have a higher prevalence of PL, additionally it was hypothesised that females may be more affected. 7|Page 2.0 Methods and Materials Data collected as part of the VetCompass Animal Surveillance project18, a project of the Royal Veterinary College that collaborates data from first-opinion Practice Management Systems (PMS), from willing participation practices. 19.Practitioners routinely record the clinical records and select an appropriate summary diagnostic term(s) from a terminology list embedded within the software database, known as VeNom codes20 De-identified data are shared from over 120 clinics across England, and is relevant to the owned canine population. The data includes free text clinical notes, (summery diagnostic terms, treatments and deceased status) and demographic data on Breed, Gender, and date of birth recorded (DoB), neuters status, weight and insurance status. Data downloaded from the PMSs following relevant clinical queries data was uploaded to the secure VetCompass mySQL database. The cohort study of dogs attending participating practices during the study period was evaluated for potential PL, VeNom codes where use to searched for coded cases. Free text clinical notes were also assessed for evidence of potential cases from free text, multiple field terms where used: patella, MPL, LPL, PL, slipping pat, floating pat, trochlear groove, kneecap lux, femoral groove, floating kneecap, slipping kneecap, kneecap disloc. Patients identified from the VeNom search where grouped, and those with missing data or duplications where removed. In order to confirm the diagnosis selected by the VeNom query, the full clinical histories were examined thoroughly, to sort differentials from a definitive diagnosis. Case definition for PL required a definitive diagnosis based on either conscious physical exam findings (luxated or ability to luxate), sedated physical examination findings, or radiological findings. For each case there had to be no evidence of trauma that could have caused the PL. Patients that met case criteria had further data coding, to identify date of diagnosis, incident or pre-existing, and if surgery was performed, whether there was case referral for surgical treatment (within the organisation or separate referral centre), and the limbs affected were also recorded. To evaluate risk factors for a diagnosis of PL a case control study was nested within the cohort of dogs attending practices. The control population was selected at random, through a random number generator 21, from the denominator of dogs, patients with a suggestive history of PL where excluded from the control group. Data sets once selected and coded from the VetCompass, where extracted to WSP Spreadsheets22 for data cleaning. Data cleaning involved verification checks to eliminate any cases of missing data, and data classification. Classification included standardisation of breed into three groups of adult target weight as determined by The Kennel Club23, 1) <10kg Small 2) 10-20kg Medium 3) 8|Page >20kg Large, or unknown which consisted of unidentified crossbreeds. The pedigree variable was categorised into three. Dogs where recorded as either ‘recognised pedigree breed or pure breed’ such as Pomeranian, ‘designer breed’ such as ‘Cavapoo’ or ‘non-recognised’ such as a cross breed of unknown mix, (Not including ‘Jack Russell Terrier’ or Parsons Jack Russell). Sex was categorised into two, of ‘male’ and ‘female’. Finally limbs affected was categorised into four, ‘Bilaterally affected’ ‘left side only’ ‘right side only’ or ‘non-recorded’. Age for the confirmed case population is considered the date of confirmed diagnosis according to electronic patient records (EPRs), minus the date of birth. The age was summarised to years, those below a year are recorded as 0 years. Control patient ages were calculated by the centre point between the date of birth and final EPR entry. Data was statistically analysed with IBM SPSS V.20.24 Categorical data were summarised with number (%). Categorical data included variables ‘Breed Size’, ‘Pedigree, ‘Sex’, and ‘Limb(s) affected’. Quantitative data were assessed graphically for normality and summarised with or median and range, normal distributions were summarised with mean and standard deviation. Skewed distributions were summarised with median, range and interquartile range, The MannWhitney U test used to analyse as data was skewed. Analysis were carried out using the Pearson Chi-Square or fishers exact test as appropriate for categorical data25, Univariable binary logistic regression was used to quantify the association with odds ratios confidence intervals of 95%26. Statistical significant set at 5%. Prevalence was estimated by using the number of confirmed cases as a proportion percentage to all possible cases, the population was scaled up using proportion of the cases sampled to estimate the prevalence in the study population demographic, and not just analysed records. A small breed specific prevalence was calculated for study comparison, using prevalence of breed size categories for the study population. The study control was proportionally up scaled, to be used as denominator for the study population. 95% CI where calculated in Microsoft Excel. 9|Page 3.0 Results Query search delivered a possible 6,334 patella luxation cases. Following manual verification, of a random 2836 cases, 849 confirmed cases where identified that met the case definition. Others could not be included into PL group due to lack of definitive diagnosis, or other patella abnormalities. Overall study data set comprised 235,394 dogs, from 120 clinics across England. During the study period September 1st 2009 and August 31st 2014, 849 cases were identified from a sample group of 2836 giving an apparent prevalence of as 0.81 per cent (95% CI 0.77– 0.84%). This study demonstrates 30% of England’s canine population to be of small breed, it can thus be calculated that 4.03% (95% CI 3.28-4.95%) of the small breed population is affected by PL. The 849 cases where possible were classified according to limbs affected. Bilat-306 LHS260 RHS-220 Not recorded- 63 patients, P-value 0.807. 3.1 Risk Factor - Adult breed size associations In the case control study 849 cases (PL group) were compared with 850 randomised control dogs. The PL group consisted of 68.3% (n=580); small breed dogs; 9.7% Medium breed (n=82); 3.8% (n=32) large breed and 18.3% (n=155) unknown. The controls consisted of 30% (n=255) small breeds; 27.4% (n=233) medium breeds; 25.6% (n=218) large breeds and 16.9% (n=144) unknown breed sizes (P value of <0.001), Small breed dogs were 2.2 times more at odd to be diagnosed as PL case (95%CI 1.91-2.71) (Table1) than medium breeds P value (<0.001), large breeds are 0.3 times at odds to have PL (95% CI 0.27-0.46) more at odds (P value <0.001). The Yorkshire terrier appeared the most affected in this study, they account for 13.7% of our affected case population, comparable with and estimated population in England of 3.6% from the control, the Yorkshire terrier appeared approximately 3.8 time more at odds of having PL (95% CI- 2.49-5.63) than the base of crossbred. 3.2 Risk Factor - Breed classification associations 79.95%, (n=677) affected dogs were regarded as Kennel club registered breeds, a further 1.4% (n=12) were identified as ‘designer’ breeds, 18.8% (n=160) were classified as crossbreeds (not including the Jack Russell Terrier). Control analysis highlighted population groups as 79.4% (n=675) pure breeds, and 3.6% (n=31), 16.9% (n=144), designer and crossbred respectively, (P = 0.010). Comparably pure breeds where 2.5 times more at odds to be affected by PL that others, (P value <0.005). 3.3 Risk Factor - Gender associations The gender distribution placed 54.5% (n=463) of affected dogs within female and 45.5% (n=386) males’ categories respectively, including neutered canines. 48.1% (n=409) of controls 10 | P a g e where female, and 51.2% (n=435) male, with 6 control cases missing due to lack of original practise data. (P value 0.002). Females where 1.14% (95% CI 0.97-1.35%) more at odds of having patella luxation than males, (P value 0.087). 3.4 Risk Factor - Age associations The age of entire case population ranges from 0.2-17.6 years, with a Median age of 4.0years (Interquartile range 1.7-7.5 yrs), Entire control patient population age at the centre point ranges from 0.1-30.7, with multiple outliers. Median age of patients was 3.8 years (IQR 1.2-7.9 yrs) (Pvalue 0.93). Most PL cases are of 2-4 years at 21.1% (n=181) of the affected population (PValue= 0.0001) (Table1),however based on ORs, the odds of dogs at 1-2years of age were most at odds 1.45 (CI 1.12-1.89%). 375 (44.2%) of the patella luxation cases where insured patients, conversely comparable to noncases with 161 (18.9%) patients insured (P value = .005). 266 (31.3%) cases where uninsured the further 208 (24.5%) patients where unknown. Control patients had 552 (32.5%) uninsured patients with a further 403 (47.4%) unknown. 11 | P a g e Table 1- Results of univariable logistic regression analysis of individual risk factors, or interquartile range where appropriate, for canine PL Variable Category Case Non Case OR 95% CI Sex P-value 0.087 Male Female 386 463 435 404 1 (base) 1.14 Crossbred Designer Purebred 160 12 677 144 31 675 1 (base) 0.38 1.00 0.97-1.35 Pure Bred status <0.005 0.19-0.75 0.87-1.58 Common Breeds <0.0001 Crossbred Yorkshire Terrier Jack Russell Terrier Chihuahua Cavalier King Charles Terrier - West Highland White Bichon Staffordshire Bull Terrier Pomeranian Pug Lhasa Apso Shih-tzu French Bull dog 160 116 71 69 52 40 144 31 50 22 13 18 1 (base) 3.75 1.42 3.14 4.00 2.22 2.49-563 0.97-2.06 1.93-5.12 2.16-7.40 1.26-3.91 31 26 15 75 2.07 0.35 1.10-3.86 0.22-0.54 21 21 20 18 16 4 9 7 21 3 5.25 2.34 2.86 0.85 5.33 1.79-15.4 1.06-5.13 1.20-6.80 0.45-1.62 1.55-18.4 Unknown Crosses Small <10kg Medium 10-20kg Large >20kg 155 580 82 32 144 255 233 218 1 (base) 2.27 0.352 0.48 Uninsured Insured Unknown 266 375 208 552 161 403 1 (base) 2.33 0.52 Median (IQR) 4 (1.77.5) 3.8 (1.27.9) <1year 1-2years 2-4 years 4-6years 6-8years 8-10 years 10> years 83 158 181 140 106 75 110 180 109 128 98 93 61 143 Adult Size Category <0.0001 1.91-2.71 0.27-0.46 0.40-0.57 Insurance Status <0.005 1.89-2.87 0.43-0.63 Age Continuous 0.93 4.84-5.25 Age categorical <0.0001 1 (base) 1.45 1.42 1.43 1.14 1.23 0.77 1.12-1.89 1.11-1.81 1.08-1.88 0.85-1.53 0.86-1.74 0.59-1.00 12 | P a g e 4.0 Discussion The aim of this retrospective study was to assess the prevalence and risk factors of PL patients across England, using EPR data from multiple first opinion practices. 4.1 Data analysis of hypothesis The findings of this study demonstrate the estimated prevalence of canine PL across the study to be 0.8% (95% CI 0.77% – 0.84%). Calculating that 30% of the English canine population is to be small breed, it can be calculated that 6.83% (95% CI 6.62% - 7.04%) is the total prevalence in small breeds across England, Conversely it can be calculated that 0.3% of large breed dogs are affected in the general population, meaning that small breed dogs are 22 times more likely to be effected. Although the prevalence percentage is low among small breeds, the comparative odds are about twice that previously recorded at 12 times 2. The author is unaware of any similar reports on the whole canine population in England, nor any recorded prevalence percentage in England. 4.2 Risk factors of PL 4.2.1 Association of breed The current study found that small breeds were associated with a greater risk of PL than both medium and large breeds. The over-representation of small breeds at 68.3% of the affected dog population, is a common theme among many studies including Priester (1972) and Wangdee (2005). Priester demonstrated that small breeds were 12 times more likely to be affected, from a population of 542 cases, from a study performed across the USA in 1969. This report concurs with the association of small breeds, however places them at 22 times more likely to be affected. The current study and Priesters differ in definition of small breed, whereby Priester states small breeds to weigh less than 9kg, compared to 10kg in the current. The classification of body weight obtained by Priesters is the adult weight guidelines from the American Kennel Club, conversely the current study uses The Kennel Club. Predicted adults weights are no longer published by the American Kennel Club27, however disparity between the two groups over 44 years may explain some of the difference between the breed associations with PL. Furthermore the suggested adult weight of breeds may hold little relation to actual patient weight, depending on environmental factors, breed linage, and accuracy of predicted adult weight classifications. The Yorkshire terrier, Jack Russell terrier, Pomeranian and Cavalier King Charles showed increased risk of diagnosis with PL with approximately 13.7%; 8.4%; 6.1% and 8.1% respectively of the case group, with the Pomeranian most at odd. This concurs from Priesters in 1969 study that place Pomeranians as the most at risk accounting for 8.1% of the effected 13 | P a g e population. The current study also concurs with reports that Yorkshire terrier, Chihuahua and Cavalier King Charles are frequently affected by PL 7. Moreover at the time of Denny’s report the Jack Russell terrier was not a Kennel Club recognised breed, therefore may have classified as crossbreed, thus not occur in Denny’s study. Pure breeds or recognised pedigrees accounted for the majority of affected dogs, and are significantly more at risk. However the control group mirrors the percentage of the pure breed population. It could be argued that they are more at risk due to the numbers of these dogs in the general population, rather than associations with pedigree. 4.2.2 Influence of gender The finding that females were at an increased risk of PL, compared to males is in agreement with previous work from Bound and others (2009), which reported 54% of dogs as female, this study finds similar evidence of a female bias at 54.5%. Evidence of increased risk may link to previously work suggesting a hormonal influence 16. The population of females shown in this study control group is lower than male at 48.1%, 51.2% respectively. 4.2.3 Influence of age This study elicits the median age for 4 years with the greatest risk to dogs at 1-2 years of age, preceded 2-4years. Least at risk dogs ages 8-10years. The control population demonstrates only a minimal difference compared to the PL cases, except from the population below a year of age, where the control population is over twice that of the PL cases. Previous reports designate PL as a congenital disorder2, further works suggest that PL cases are most commonly observed at 4 years of age 28, while other studies give median age that varies with disease progression, suggesting that clinical signs and diagnosis increases with severity. Retroductive reasoning suggests that animals would be more commonly presented to a veterinarian with a greater degree of PL. The current study demonstrates a binary effect in age of diagnosis, both in young adult mature dogs and older dogs. Theorising could suggest that young adult become skeletally mature and demonstrate clinical signs, while older dogs loose muscle tone and favour of the quadriceps mechanism. 4.2.4 Insurance status of affected patients Insured dogs showed increased odds of diagnosis with PL compared with uninsured dogs, however a large proportion of the study control had unknown states of insurance. Raising the question of EPRs data input. In the authors opinion many veterinarians may only request the insurance information upon the diagnosis of a disease process that may require funding. Furthermore insured animals are likely to be observed by veterinarians more frequently. It can 14 | P a g e also be considered that some veterinarians will only record a diagnosis of PL with supportive diagnostic imaging, that some uninsured animals may not have access too. 4.2.5 Limb Association The current report did not detect statistical evidence for limb association of occurrence for PL, although more dogs where recorded bilaterally than either the right or the left. In agreements with other reports 8 bilaterally affected patients are observed more frequently. Conversely other reports suggest that because PL may be due to asymmetric growth of the femoral physes17, that would correlate more to a single limb affected. 4.3 Limitations of study The study prevalence estimates relied on the accuracy that 29.98% of VeNom queries used highlight true PLs (849 of 2836), the possibility for further cases using different terms may be applicable, however it allows a retroductive reasoning to estimate total population figures. In the author’s opinion, the 2836 EPRs verified is minimal considering potential size of population. The accuracy of the prevalence could be increased with a greater size of study group, the major factor in this being time available to manually verify each record. The nature of data collection from first opinion PMSs, and EPRs is such that the study relies on data that was not collected for the sole purpose of statistical analysis. As such, data entry for the current reports, noted primary veterinarians did not always record the grade of luxation, nor whether it was medial or lateral. Other fields had missing data that could elicit errors in the analysis of risk factors. Furthermore VeNom codes were used to identify potential PL cases, the accuracy of data sets is reliant on the VeNom codes highlighting all potential PLs. A further issue of data collection is the location of data sources during the study period. In the author’s option the location of a clinic can greatly change the diversity of breed seen, unless geographical population equalling is performed data may be subject to spatial variation. Limitations of specific risk factors, such as weight as a continuous variable are apparent through lack of data, due to numerous missing weight records. Resulting in lack of accurate accusations. Furthermore current study developed an estimate of age of diagnosis for cases by subtracting the date of birth (DOB) from the date of PL notes in the EPRs. However the author noted many EPRs where the diagnosis may have been made prior to the current recording in the clinical history. Moreover incidence where by the DOB recording may have been incorrect are apparent, one cases recorded DOB was 23/09/1983, ageing the patient at 30 years. Although PL is a congenital disease process, the age of diagnosis varies considerably from different reports, it 15 | P a g e suggests that practitioners may not be testing for PL during routine physical examination, or triggering factors are still to be elucidated. The population size observed in the current study is reduced due to time constraints at the level of manual verification of individual EPR entries. In the authors opinion a greater population size would reflect on the report, specifically in relation to total population prevalence. 5.0 Conclusion Overall this retrospective cohort study provides evidence on the major risk factors of PL, supporting similar reports from other nations. In this study the total population prevalence was 0.8% for patella luxation in England, with small breeds 22 time more likely to be affected at 6.68% of the whole population over 0.3% large breed, a figure that surpasses a similar study from the 1960s. The major risk factors elucidated from this study remain in agreements with other studies from other nations, with small breeds and females being at highest risk. The Yorkshire terrier and Jack Russell terrier were the two most common breeds affected from this study from number of dogs affected, but the Pomeranians was most as odds of PL, however the study also places other breeds recorded ‘most at risk’ from other reports within the top raking. Future work on PL may provide a more definitive prevalence, and work on breed and gender in correlation to anatomical measurements may prove an exciting addition to the literature. Word Count (excluding abstract, references, table/ figures and title) – 3963 Abstract word count – 245 Acknowledgments The author would like to thank the VetCompass team, with a special thanks to Dan O’Neill for data handling from the VetCompass database, and David Brodbelt for supervision of the VetCompass analytics. 16 | P a g e References 1. 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