A Healthier Respect for Ovaries
David J.
Waters, DVM, PhD, Diplomate ACVS
A recent
study by my research group appearing next month in Aging Cell
reveals shortened longevity as a possible complication associated
with ovary removal in dogs (1). This work represents the first
investigation testing the strength of association between lifetime
duration of ovary exposure and exceptional longevity in mammals. To
accomplish this, we constructed lifetime medical histories for two
cohorts of Rottweiler dogs living in 29 states and Canada:
Exceptional Longevity Cohort = a group of exceptionally long-lived
dogs that lived at least 13 years; and Usual Longevity Cohort = a
comparison group of dogs that lived 8.0 to 10.8 years (average age
at death for Rottweilers is 9.4 years). A female survival advantage
in humans is well-documented; women are 4 times more likely than men
to live to 100. We found that, like women, female Rottweilers were
more likely than males to achieve exceptional longevity (Odds Ratio,
95% confidence interval = 2.0, 1.2 - 3.3; p = .006). However,
removal of ovaries during the first 4 years of life erased the
female survival advantage. In females, this strong positive
association between ovaries and longevity persisted in multivariate
analysis that considered other factors, such as height, adult body
weight, and mother with exceptional longevity.
In summary, we found female Rottweilers who kept
their ovaries for at least 6 years were 4.6 times more likely to
reach exceptional longevity (i.e. live >30 % longer than average)
than females with the shortest ovary exposure. Our results support
the notion that how long females keep their ovaries determines how
long they live.
In the pages that follow, I have attempted to
frame these new findings in a way that will encourage veterinarians
to venture beyond the peer-reviewed scientific text and data-filled
tables of Aging Cell to consider the pragmatic, yet
sometimes emotionally charged implications of this work. Call it a
primer for the dynamic discussions that will undoubtedly take place,
not only between practitioners and pet owners, but also within the
veterinary profession. Call it a wake-up call for how little
veterinarians have been schooled in the mechanistic nuts and bolts
underlying the aging process. Call it an ovary story.
Do ovaries really promote longevity? Observed
associations between exposures and outcomes may not necessarily be
causal, so we explored alternative, non-causal explanations for the
association between ovaries and exceptional longevity in our study.
But we found no evidence that factors which may influence a pet
owner's decision on age at ovary removal — for example, earlier
ovariectomy in dogs with substandard conformation or delayed
ovariectomy to obtain more offspring in daughters of long-lived
mothers — could adequately account for the strong association.
There is another aspect of our data pattern that
gives us further confidence that ovaries really do matter when it
comes to successful aging. A simple explanation for the observation
that ovaries promote longevity would be that taking away ovaries
increases the risk for a major lethal disease. In Rottweilers,
cancer is the major killer. We found, however, that by conducting a
subgroup analysis that excluded all dogs that died of cancer, the
strong association between intact ovaries and exceptional longevity
persisted. After excluding all cancer deaths, females that kept
their ovaries the longest were 9 times more likely to reach
exceptional longevity than females with shortest ovary exposure.
Thus, we observed a robust ovarian association with longevity that
was independent of cause of death, suggesting that a network of
processes regulating the intrinsic rate of aging is under ovarian
control. This work positions pet dogs, with their broad range
of lifetime ovary exposure, to become biogerontology's new
workhorse for identifying ovary-sensitive physiological processes
that promote healthy longevity.
Interestingly, our findings in dogs surface just
as data from women are calling into question whether those who
undergo hysterectomy should have ovary removal or ovary sparing. In
fact, our results mirror the findings from more than 29,000 women in
the Nurses’ Health Study who underwent hysterectomy for benign
uterine disease (2). In that study, the upside of ovariectomy —
protection against ovarian, uterine, and breast cancer — was
outweighed by increased mortality from other causes. As a result,
longevity was cut short in women who lost their ovaries before the
age of 50 compared with those who kept their ovaries for at least 50
years. Taken together, the emerging message for dogs and women seems
to be that when it comes to longevity, it pays to keep your ovaries.
But
before we all go out and buy T-shirts with some romantic imperative
like “Save the Ovaries”, perhaps we should step back and consider
the following question: Why haven’t previous dog studies called our
attention to this potential downside of ovariectomy? Reviewing the
literature, an answer quickly bubbles up. No previous studies in pet
dogs have rigorously evaluated the association between ovaries and
longevity. Two frequently cited reports (3,4) provide limited
guidance because: (1) longevity data are presented as combined mean
age at death for a relatively small number of individuals of more
than 50 breeds of different body size and life expectancy; and (2)
ovarian status is reported as “intact” or “spayed”, rather than as
number of years of lifetime ovary exposure. Comparing female dogs
binned into the categories of “intact” versus “spayed” introduces a
methodological bias that might lead one to conclude that ovaries
adversely influence longevity, i.e. ovary removal promotes longevity.
Because the reasons for ovariectomy (e.g., uterine infection,
mammary cancer) increase with increasing age, it is expected that a
large percentage of the oldest-dogs are binned as “spayed” despite
having many years of ovary exposure. For example, a dog who at age
12 undergoes ovariohysterectomy for pyometra would be binned as “spayed”,
despite 12 years of ovary exposure. In our study, we employed a more
stringent study design — restricting the study population to AKC
registered, pure-bred dogs of one breed, carefully quantitating the
lifetime duration of ovarian exposure — in order to lessen the
likelihood of such bias. And we reasoned that studying veterinary
teaching hospital-based populations of dogs with artifactually low
life expectancies (for example, 3.5 years is median age at death for
Rottweilers in the Veterinary Medical Data Base)(5) was an
inappropriate vehicle to describe the influence that ovaries have on
aging. So we cast a wider net and collected data from Rottweiler
owners nationwide, focusing our attention on exceptional longevity,
not average age at death, as our study endpoint.
Why study exceptional longevity? Why not average
longevity? We thought studying the most exceptionally long-lived
individuals would tell us something about what it takes to age
successfully. It’s the same rationale used by Thomas Perls and
investigators of the New England Centenarian Study (6) and by other
scientists who study long-lived humans in other parts of the world
(7). The approach even garners support from the mathematical field.
In a seminal book on the origins of creative genius, the
mathematician Jacques Hadamard wrote: “In conformity with a rule
which seems applicable to every science of observation, it is the
exceptional phenomenon which is likely to explain the usual one.”
(8) Hadamard was trying to understand how the brain gets creative so
he studied people with extreme creativity. When it comes to studying
aging, we’re solidly in the Hadamard camp. That is why in 2005 we
established the Exceptional Longevity Data Base, launching the first
systematic study of the oldest-old pet dogs (9). But folks in the
opposing camp might justifiably fire back: “Don’t study extreme
longevity. Extreme longevity is much more about luck than it is
about genes, or environment, or ovaries.”
So to address the possibility that the
“strangeness” or outlier nature of dogs with exceptional longevity
could be forging a misleading link between ovaries and longevity, we
studied a separate cohort of Rottweiler dogs. This data set was
comprised of 237 female Rottweilers living in North America that
died at ages 1.2 to 12.9 years — none were exceptionally long-lived.
Information on medical history, age at death, and cause of death was
collected by questionnaire and telephone interviews with pet owners
and local veterinary practitioners. In this population, we found
females that kept their ovaries for at least 4.5 years had a
statistically significant 37% reduction in mortality rate (1). This
translated into a median survival of 10.4 years for females with
more than 4.5 years of ovary exposure — 1.4 years longer than the
median survival of only 9.0 years in females with shorter ovary
exposure (p < 0.0001). Taken together, if
you take out ovaries before 4 years of age you cut longevity short
an average of 1.4 years and decrease the likelihood of reaching
exceptional longevity by 3-fold.
Up
to this point, my ovary story has centered around a summarizing of
methodologies and results. The reader has been given opportunity to
see the gist of our findings within the context of previous dog
studies and late-breaking studies in women. Now, let us pivot our
attention a bit away from the results to focus on the recipients of
these results — DVMs and pet owners.
We can start by tackling the question: Just how
receptive will DVMs be to these new research findings? It’s hard for
old dogs to learn new tricks. But one thing is sure — blossoming
change is rooted in real communication. The anthropologist Gregory
Bateson wrote: “The pre-instructed state of the recipient of every
message is a necessary condition for all communication. A book can
tell you nothing unless you know 9/10ths of it already.” (10). I
call this “Bateson’s Rule of the 9/10ths”. If Bateson is right, then
we will want to do something about the pre-instructed state of
veterinarians. Because when it comes to the biology of aging, the
state is virtually a blank slate. None of us received training in
the biology of aging as part of our DVM curriculum — whether we
graduated 30 years ago or last summer. Therefore, most DVMs are
ill-prepared to receive messages examining the mechanistic
underpinnings of the aging process. A Batesonian prescription for
positive change would be to ratchet up the biology of aging IQ of
practicing veterinarians. We agree. That is why we established the
first gerontology training program for veterinarians in 2007 (11).
We believe that by helping veterinarians “know” more about aging,
they will be more able and more receptive to communicating the
things that promote healthy longevity in their patients — things
like preserving ovaries.
For certain, DVMs will be asked by pet owners to
help them make their decision about age at spay in light of this new
information. The question will be asked: Just how generalizable are
these findings in Rottweilers to other segments of the pet dog
population? It is impossible to say at this time. It will demand
further study. Alas, 10 years from now, we might just find out that
a longevity-promoting effect of ovaries in dogs is limited — limited
to large breeds, urban but not rural dogs, or only those individuals
with particular polymorphisms in insulin-like growth factor-1. These
restrictions should not only be expected, they should be celebrated.
It will mean that we have looked more deeply into how ovaries might
influence healthy longevity. It will mean that our initial findings
have been contextualized. And it is this contextualization of
information that marks scientific progress — the kind of progress
that guides sound clinical decision making. For it is context that
determines meaning (12).
Our provocative findings in Aging Cell
mean that it’s time to re-think the notion that taking away ovaries
has no significant downside to a dog’s healthy longevity. Perhaps it
would help us if we thought of lifetime ovary exposure as
information — information that instructs the organism. Just how long
and how healthy a female lives reflects what her cells, tissues, and
organs thought they heard from the message received. Of course in
biology, there is no single message but a symphony of messages,
enabling each individual to successfully respond to environmental
challenges. Our findings suggest that ovaries orchestrate that
symphony. Taking away ovaries in early or mid-life makes for muddled
information, less than perfect music.
Information muddling can ensnarl decision-making.
Our research takes an important first step toward disentangling the
thinking about ovaries and longevity. We must never be paralyzed by
the incompleteness of our knowledge. Our knowledge will always be
incomplete — subject to revision, primed for further inquiry. This
uncertainty, although invigorating for the investigator, is often
painful for the practitioner who seeks simple, fact-driven
algorithms to guide his action. Just as scientists will be called
upon to forge ahead with their scientific inquiries, so too will
practitioners be counted on to master the uncertainty. Together, we
must navigate what the Danish philosopher-theologian Soren
Kierkegaard called the gap “between the understanding and the
willing.” That is, we must ask the right questions and make smart
choices so that our action (the willing) is in synch with our
knowledge (the understanding). Under just what circumstances will a
particular individual benefit from specific lifestyle decisions?
This is perhaps the most prescient, overarching question in the
wellness and preventive medicine fields facing both human and
veterinary health professionals today. How can we promote healthy
longevity? Antioxidant supplementation or calorie restriction? Ovary
removal or ovary sparing?
Undoubtedly,
there will be protagonists and antagonists in this ovary story. The
protagonists will be open-minded to following a new script. They
will embrace the idea of ovary sparing for critical periods of time
to maximize longevity. They might even recognize the need for some
sort of “ovarian mimetic” in spayed dogs to optimize healthy aging.
The antagonists in this story — the defenders of the old script —
will dismiss as trivial the notion that ovaries regulate the rate of
aging and influence healthy longevity. Lines will be drawn and
opinions will fly. But that's what healthy debate is —
antagonists and protagonists keeping a high priority issue front and
center, not allowing it to fade into the woodwork. It would seem
that, in light of the new scientific findings, a contemporary
dialogue should balance the potential benefits of elective ovary
removal (13) with its possible detrimental effects on longevity.
References
1. Waters DJ, Kengeri SS, Clever B, et al: "Exploring
the mechanisms of sex differences in longevity: lifetime ovary
exposure and exceptional longevity in dogs."
Aging Cell October 26, 2009
2. Parker WH, Broder MS, Chang E et al: "Ovarian
conservation at the time of hysterectomy and long-term health
outcomes in the Nurses' Health Study." Obstet Gynecol 113:
1027-1037, 2009
3. Bronson RT: "Variation in age at death of dogs
of different sexes and breeds." Am J Vet Res 43: 2057-9,
1982
4. Michell AR: "Longevity of British breeds of dog
and its relationships with sex, size, cardiovascular variables and
disease." Vet Rec 145: 625-629, 1999
5. Patronek GJ, Waters DJ, Glickman LT et al: "Comparative
longevity of pet dogs and humans: implications for gerontology
research." J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 52: B171-8, 1997
6. Perls TT, Hutter Silver M, Lauerman JF:
Living to 100: Lessons in Living to Your Maximum Potential at Any
Age, New York, NY, Basic Books, 1999
7. Franceschi C, Motta L, Valensin S et al: "Do
men and women follow different trajectories to reach extreme
longevity?" Aging (Milano) 12: 77-84, 2000
8. Hadamard J: The Psychology of Invention in
the Mathematical Field. New York, NY, Oxford Univ Press, 1945,
p. 136
9. Waters DJ, Wildasin K: "Cancer clues from pet
dogs." Sci Am 295: 94-101, 2006
10. Bateson G, Bateson MC: Angels Fear:
Towards an Epistemology of the Sacred. New York, NY, Bantam,
1988, p 163
11. Gerontology Program for DVMs co-sponsored and
organized by Gerald P. Murphy Cancer Foundation, Purdue University
Center on Aging and the Life Course, P&G Pet Care; for more
information go to www.gpmcf.org
12. Waters DJ, Chiang EC, Bostwick DG: "The art of
casting nets: fishing for the prize of personalized cancer
prevention." Nutr Cancer 60: 1-6, 2008
13. Kustritz MV: "Determining the optimal age for
gonadectomy of dogs and cats." J Am Vet Med Assoc 231:
1665-75, 2007 |