Part 1: The Canine Cancer Crisis – What’s Really Going On?

Cancer in Dogs - Part 1

It’s one of the great paradoxes of modern pet care. Our dogs are more loved, better fed (or so we thought), more regularly vaccinated, and more frequently treated for parasites than ever before. And yet, they are getting sicker — not healthier.

The most alarming trend? Cancer. Dogs in the United States are now diagnosed with cancer at ten times the rate of humans — around 5,300 out of every 100,000 dogs, compared to just 500 per 100,000 humans. That’s a number that should stop any dog lover in their tracks.

And it raises a powerful question: If we’re doing everything “right,” why are our pets falling apart?

The Rise of Chronic Illness in Dogs

Alongside cancer, there’s been a notable increase in a host of other chronic diseases in dogs, including:

  • Pancreatitis
  • Autoimmune disorders
  • Chronic skin issues
  • Digestive disorders like IBD
  • Kidney and liver disease

Conventional veterinary wisdom often falls back on genetics or “bad luck” as explanations. But if you ask holistic veterinarians and nutritional researchers like Dr. Conor Brady (author of Feeding Dogs), the answer lies elsewhere: in the environment — and most importantly, in the food bowl.

Genetics Loads the Gun, Environment Pulls the Trigger

It’s now widely accepted in human oncology that more than 90% of cancer is caused by environmental factors — not inherited genes. And in dogs, the case is even stronger. Why?

  • Most dogs live relatively short lives, which reduces the impact of hereditary disease
  • Purebred dogs, often cited as genetically fragile, still thrive when fed and raised correctly
  • Environmental exposures (diet, pollution, medication, lifestyle) act more rapidly in dogs due to their shorter lifespans

In other words, cancer in dogs isn’t just fate. It’s largely a man-made problem — and one we can begin to reverse.

The Ultra-Processed Pet Food Problem

If you were to trace a single root cause behind the explosion in canine cancer rates, it would be the rise of ultra-processed pet food — namely, kibble and canned food. These foods now dominate the market, with an estimated 90% of dogs eating dry or canned food daily.

But here’s the problem: kibble was never designed with health in mind. It was designed for shelf life, convenience, and profit.

Inside your average bag of “premium” kibble, you’ll find:

  • Low-quality, rendered meats — often from non-human-grade sources
  • Fats that are rancid or chemically preserved
  • Excess salt and synthetic flavour enhancers
  • Artificial vitamins to compensate for what’s been destroyed in processing
  • Up to 50% refined carbohydrates — even in “grain-free” versions

That last ingredient is the most concerning when it comes to cancer. Because cancer cells are glucose junkies. But more on that in Chapter 2.

Early Warnings from the Science

The link between processed food and disease isn’t just theoretical. In 1998, veterinary oncologist Dr. Gregory Ogilvie published a landmark paper showing that reducing carbohydrates in the diet slowed tumour growth in dogs with lymphoma.

More recently, research by Dr. Conor Brady and the University of Helsinki showed that raw-fed dogs were significantly less likely to develop chronic illness than those fed kibble. In one study, puppies fed a raw diet in early life had much lower rates of allergies, skin conditions, and digestive disease later on.

So why aren’t vets shouting this from the rooftops?

Dr Conor Brady Veterinarian

The Influence of Pet Food Corporations

Major veterinary schools and clinics are often sponsored by large pet food manufacturers. Hills, Royal Canin, and Purina not only supply free product to students and clinics — they also help shape curriculum. The result? Many vets leave school knowing far more about disease treatment than about disease prevention — especially through diet.

Prescription diets like Hill’s “ONC Care” (marketed for dogs with cancer) are still made from:

  • Whole wheat and corn gluten meal (carb-heavy fillers)
  • Low-grade chicken rendered at extreme heat
  • Fish oil that has been oxidised through processing
  • Ground pecan shells (yes, really)

No clinical trials. No fresh ingredients. And no understanding of canine nutritional biology.

The Butcher's Dog Rosie

A New Way Forward

If we want to change the trajectory of canine health, we must look past marketing and convenience — and return to the fundamentals of biology. Dogs are facultative carnivores. They are not adapted to eat grains, starches, and synthetic additives in high quantities.

Instead, they need:

  • High-quality animal proteins and fats
  • Minimal carbohydrates
  • Fresh, bioavailable nutrients from real food
  • Clean water and low toxin exposure

In Chapter 2, we’ll dive deep into the metabolic connection between carbs and cancer – and explain why tumours light up for sugar like moths to a flame.

 

References

  1. Brady, C. (2020). Feeding Dogs: The Science Behind the Dry vs. Raw Debate
  2. AVMA Cancer Prevalence Report, 2020
  3. Ogilvie, G. (1998). Nutrition and Canine Lymphoma
  4. University of Helsinki Raw Feeding Studies (2017–2020)
  5. Shojai, A. (2022). The Truth About Pet Cancer (documentary series)

Diabetes in Dogs: What You Need to Know (and How Food Plays a Role)

Diabetes in Dogs

How Kibble Contributes to Insulin Resistance

Kibble is convenient, but it comes at a cost.

To form those crunchy little pellets, manufacturers need a binder – and that binder is almost always made up of starchy carbohydrates like corn, rice, wheat, or potato. In fact, many dry dog foods are 40–60% carbohydrates – far more than a dog’s body is built to handle.

When dogs eat these high-carb meals day after day, their blood sugar spikes. In response, the pancreas produces insulin – the hormone that tells cells to absorb glucose (sugar) from the bloodstream.

Over time, those constant sugar spikes and insulin floods can lead to insulin resistance – a condition where the body stops responding to insulin properly. That’s the beginning of a dangerous metabolic loop.


What Does Insulin Resistance Mean for Your Dog?

When your dog becomes insulin resistant, their cells stop “listening” to insulin. That means:

Glucose stays in the bloodstream longer

The pancreas works overtime to produce even more insulin

Blood sugar becomes harder to regulate

Fat storage increases

Inflammation rises

Energy crashes become more frequent

Left unchecked, this cycle can progress to Type 2 diabetes – a chronic condition that requires lifelong management, often with insulin injections and strict dietary control.Pancreas Diabetes type 2 dogs

Even before full-blown diabetes sets in, insulin resistance can show up as:

  • Unexplained weight gain
  • Low energy or lethargy
  • Excessive thirst or urination
  • Skin issues or yeast infections
  • Food cravings or begging between meals

And unfortunately, many dog owners don’t realise the role kibble plays in this process.

What the Science Says – Including the Helsinki Study.

You don’t have to take our word for it – there’s science to back it up.

A landmark study from the University of Helsinki found that dogs fed a high-kibble diet had a significantly increased risk of developing chronic conditions, including metabolic disorders like obesity and diabetes. The researchers compared dogs raised on ultra-processed diets to those fed fresh or raw foods and found stark differences in long-term health outcomes.

Their findings supported what many holistic vets and nutritionists have seen for years: raw-fed dogs maintain better weight, more stable energy levels, and healthier immune systems.

Other studies have also shown that a high-glycemic diet (like kibble) can interfere with glucose metabolism, while high-protein, low-carb diets are far more effective in managing blood sugar and insulin response in dogs.

Find the Helsinki Study Here.Kibble diabetes dog

How Real Food Helps Regulate Blood Sugar Naturally

A raw, species-appropriate diet helps your dog in two powerful ways:

1. It removes the glucose overload.

Real food doesn’t rely on starchy fillers or binders. That means fewer blood sugar spikes and less insulin chaos. Instead of carbs, your dog’s energy comes from high-quality protein and healthy fats – exactly what they’re biologically designed to use.

2. It supports stable weight and metabolism.

When you remove inflammatory ingredients and empty calories, your dog’s body can find balance again. That means:

✔️ Better weight management

✔️ Steady energy throughout the day

✔️ Fewer cravings or begging between meals

✔️ Healthier hormone function (including insulin)

✔️ A reduced risk of diabetes and other chronic conditions

benefits of a raw diet for diabetes in dogs

The Bottom Line

Diabetes in dogs isn’t just about genetics – it’s deeply connected to what’s in the bowl.

Feeding a high-carb, ultra-processed diet like kibble contributes to insulin resistance, unstable blood sugar, and inflammation over time. On the flip side, feeding a raw, low-carb, whole food diet gives your dog the tools to regulate their own system naturally.

At The Butcher’s Dog, we believe in feeding dogs the way nature intended – not the way convenience dictated.

Because real food doesn’t just nourish – It protects!

Want to make the switch?

Explore our raw, low-carb meals designed to support stable energy, weight, and long-term health.

? See Our Raw Meal Range

Pancreatitis and Diet in Dogs: Why Fat Isn’t the Enemy

The Butcher's Dog Pancreatitis

What is Pancreatitis?

Pancreatitis is the inflammation of the pancreas – a vital organ responsible for producing enzymes that help digest food and hormones like insulin that regulate blood sugar.

In simple terms, it means the pancreas is stressed, inflamed, and not functioning as it should.

Common symptoms include:

  • Vomiting or nausea
  • Abdominal pain (often shown as a hunched posture)
  • Lethargy
  • Loss of appetite
  • Diarrhoea or soft stools

Pancreatitis can be acute (sudden and severe) or chronic (slow-burning and recurrent), and it’s become increasingly common in dogs. But why?

 

Fat or Food? The Real Cause of Pancreatic Stress:

The traditional thinking is that fat triggers pancreatitis. But according to a growing body of research – and experts like Dr. Conor Brady, author of Feeding Dogs – this view is overly simplistic.

The problem isn’t fat itself. It’s the quality of the diet.

Most commercial kibble is:

Ultra-processed

High in refined carbohydrates and starches

Loaded with synthetic vitamins, flavourings, and preservatives

Cooked at high temperatures, degrading nutrients and creating inflammatory compounds

This kind of diet keeps the pancreas in a constant state of overwork, especially due to the excess sugar (from carbs) and low-quality, rendered fats used for palatability.

Over time, the pancreas becomes less able to respond appropriately – even to good, natural fats.

Dogs Were Designed to Run on Fat:

Dr. Brady explains that dogs have three key energy pathways:

  • Glycolysis – breaking down sugar (carbs) for quick energy
  • Beta-oxidation – burning fat for long, sustained energy
  • Ketosis – a metabolic state where the body runs on fat-derived ketones

Dogs evolved as scavenging carnivores. Their natural fuel source is fat – not carbohydrates. In fact, feeding dogs a species-appropriate, moderate-fat, low-carb raw diet may reduce the risk of inflammatory flare-ups – including pancreatitis.

Why the Right Kind of Fat Matters:

Not all fat is equal. There’s a world of difference between:

Low-quality, oxidised fats from kibble

Rendered animal fat sprayed on dry food to boost taste

✔️ Healthy, fresh fats from raw, human-grade meat and organs

The latter – natural fats from unprocessed meat – are far easier for a dog’s body to recognise and digest. They’re also rich in fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K) and essential fatty acids that support skin, coat, brain and immune function.

Butcher's Dog Raw Dog Food

A Raw Diet Supports Pancreatic Health

Feeding a balanced raw diet takes the strain off the pancreas by removing the inflammatory ingredients that stress it in the first place.

Benefits of raw feeding for dogs with pancreatitis (or prone to it):

✔️ Reduces the carbohydrate load

✔️ Provides anti-inflammatory nutrients

✔️ Supplies steady, bioavailable energy from natural fats

✔️ Supports healthy gut flora—key to immune balance and digestion

✔️ Limits exposure to synthetic additives and toxins

Many pet parents find that switching to raw improves not only digestive symptoms, but also energy levels, coat condition, and behaviour.

It’s Not About Cutting Fat – It’s About Feeding Right:

If your dog has had a pancreatitis scare, you’ve likely been told to avoid fat. But the more important question is: What kind of food is your dog eating every day?

Feeding a raw, balanced diet made with real meat and whole foods helps nourish the pancreas – not overload it.

Because fat isn’t the enemy. But ultra-processed food should be!

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Ready to support your dog’s gut and digestion – naturally?

Explore our range of single-protein raw meals, designed to be gentle, balanced, and free from processed nasties.