Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO) Death Registry / Equine Incidences in Ontario Racing program: 2003-2019 postmortem summary

Animal Health Laboratory, University of Guelph, ON

AHL Newsletter 2020:24(1):21-22.

The Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO; previously the Ontario Racing Commission, ORC) continues in its proactive approach to advance racehorse welfare and safety of human and animal participants. In 2003, Ontario became one of the first North American racing jurisdictions to require mandatory reporting of racehorse deaths, in order to monitor, research and improve knowledge of why these events occur. Postmortem (PM) exams conducted at the Animal Health Laboratory (AHL) through the ORC Death Registry (DR, 2003-2016) and the AGCO Equine Incidences in Ontario Racing (EIOR, 2016-current) programs continue to provide comprehensive data regarding the causes of morbidity and mortality in racehorses in this province. To date, PM has been carried out on 1172 horses through these programs (Table 1). Annual variation in the number of PM cases reflects the discretionary requirement for PM of reported deaths on the part of the Registrar of AGCO.

A summary of significant PM findings is provided in Table 2. A comprehensive review of AGCO PM cases was recently conducted as part of a separate retrospective study1. As a result of this study, some cases have been reclassified from data presented in previous editions of the AHL Newsletter. Since 2015, computed tomography (CT) of fractured and contralateral limbs has been carried out on select DR and EIOR postmortem cases through collaboration with the Diagnostic Imaging section of the Ontario Veterinary College Health Sciences Center. The goal of this in-depth examination is to identify pre-existent lesions, primarily in bone, that contribute to catastrophic fractures. The protocol was continued in 2019, with CT imaging of 26/ 27 limb fracture cases submitted for PM exam. Pre-existent lesions in bone were identified by CT and considered potentially predisposing to fracture in 11 of 26 (42%) cases. 

Exercise-associated sudden death continues to be of special concern in the racing industry. At the AHL, a modified in-depth PM protocol is used in the evaluation of these cases, with special emphasis on cardiovascular and respiratory systems. In 2019, the cause of death was investigated in 10 horses that died while exercising. Significant pulmonary hemorrhage was evident in 5 horses; aortic rupture was identified in 2 horses; cervical vertebral fracture was present in 1 horse; and no cause of death was identified in 2 horses. Among all sudden death cases from 2003-2019, significant pulmonary hemorrhage was identified in 93/ 187 (50%) horses. The term ‘equine exercise-associated fatal pulmonary hemorrhage’ (EAFPH) is currently used to categorize these cases, in which extensive pulmonary hemorrhage and edema is identified postmortem. In 43/ 187 (23%) exercise-associated sudden death cases from 2003-2019, no potentially fatal lesions were identified and the cause of death remained undetermined. It has been speculated that exercise-associated cardiac dysrhythmia, leading to acute heart failure and pulmonary hypertension, may be the underlying cause of death among many of these horses, and may also contribute to pulmonary hemorrhage in these animals.2   Typically, no morphologic lesions are detected in heart as a cause or result of fatal ventricular dysrhythmia, and the diagnosis cannot be confirmed based on PM findings.

Summaries of postmortem submissions to the Animal Health Laboratory under this program and diagnoses by body system for these cases are provided in the following tables.   AHL

Table 1.  Breed distribution of ORC Death Registry / AGCO EIOR submissions to the AHL, 2003-2019.

Breed /

year

Standardbred

Thoroughbred

Quarter Horse

Total

2003

63

59

0

122

2004

81

60

0

141

2005

59

51

0

110

2006

58

46

2

106

2007

66

53

3

122

2008

27

24

0

51

2009

28

16

1

45

2010

22

8

2

32

2011

24

18

4

46

2012

20

14

0

34

2013

19

26

2

47

2014

21

22

8

51

2015

29

24

3

56

2016

15

32

3

50

2017

26

34

2

62

2018

16

33

1

50

2019

12

35

0

47

Total

586

555

31

1172

Table 2. Significant postmortem lesions identified in ORC Death Registry / AGCO EIOR submissions by body system, 2003-2019.

Table2. Significant postmortem lesions identified in ORC Death Registry

References
1.  DeLay J. Postmortem findings in Ontario racehorses, 2003-2015.  J Vet Diagn Invest 2017;29(4):457-464.
2.  Physick-Sheard PW, McGurrin MKJ. Ventricular arrhythmias during race recovery in Standardbred racehorses and associations with autonomic activity. J Vet Intern Med 2010;24:1158-1166.