BVA/KC Hip Dysplasia Screening Scheme

Puppy looking left

What is hip dysplasia?

Hip dysplasia is a complex inherited condition where the hip joint does not develop correctly. As a dog gets older, the joint undergoes wear and tear and deteriorates, leading to a loss of function. This can cause varying degrees of pain, discomfort, stiffness and lameness.

Find out more about hip dysplasia.

How is hip dysplasia inherited?

Hip dysplasia is controlled by a number of different genes and influenced by several environmental factors (e.g. diet, exercise or factors when in the womb before birth etc.). Each of the genes that help to make a dog’s hips may have different possible versions, or variants. Some versions increase the risk of hip dysplasia, while others decrease the risk.

Each dog will have a mix of these “good” and “bad” versions of genes, making it very difficult to predict whether a dog will be affected. The impact one version of a gene has might only be slight, but lots of genes having a small influence have a combined additive effect.

The way in which these conditions are inherited is not straightforward; hence the name complex inherited disorders. These complex diseases are usually seen across many different breeds and are also described in both cross breeds and mixed breeds.

Is this scheme relevant to my breed?

Find out which health tests or schemes are recommended for your breed on our Breeds A to Z. These recommendations are suggested by breed clubs and approved by The Kennel Club's committees.

Which breeds are affected?

Since hip dysplasia is an inherited condition, dogs that share similar genes are more likely to share similar inherited conditions. Individuals in each breed share a significant amount of their genetic make up and so certain breeds are more vulnerable to hip dysplasia.

It is generally accepted that this condition is more common in larger breeds, but can occur in any dog of any size, regardless of whether they are purebred or a mixed breed.  

Breeds most commonly at risk include:

My dog doesn’t have signs of hip dysplasia, should I still screen them?

If we recommended it for your breed, then yes. Both the mother and father should be screened for hip dysplasia, regardless of whether they have signs or not. Some dogs may seem fit and healthy, but they may have physical changes, which can only be seen on X-ray, that are linked to hip dysplasia. Even if their ability to walk isn’t affected, dogs with these changes have a higher risk of passing on genes that are linked to hip dysplasia to their puppies. Having your dog screened under the BVA/KC hip dysplasia scheme helps you to find out more about your dog, allowing you to make informed breeding decisions and reduce the risk of producing affected puppies. Also, by having your dog screened, their results contribute towards estimated breeding values, which is a useful tool that can help you understand more about the genes your dog passes on to their puppies.

How do I get my dog screened for hip dysplasia?

The most reliable way of determining the health of a dog’s hips is by having your dog x-rayed and assessed by a specialist. Owners should make an appointment with their vet who can take the required x-ray of the dog's hips. The x-ray will be taken under anaesthesia or heavy sedation. Your dog's results can then be sent to the BVA/KC Hip Dysplasia Scheme for grading.

Why screen your dog?

Breeders are able to screen their breeding stock for hip dysplasia before the dogs are bred from. Testing all potential breeding stock, where relevant, allows breeders to better understand the kind of genes a dog may pass on to its offspring, giving them the information required to avoid producing clinically affected puppies. The data from the BVA/KC Hip Dysplasia Scheme is also used to create estimated breeding values (EBVs). EBVs help owners to select lower-risk dogs for breeding. Making informed decisions from health test results enables breeders to adapt their breeding programmes and reduce the risk of the diseases appearing in future generations.

Using the BVA/KC Hip Dysplasia Scheme

The British Veterinary Association (BVA) and The Kennel Club (KC) Hip Dysplasia Scheme assess dogs' x-rays to look for abnormalities in hip joints. A panel of experts provide a graded score for each x-ray. Your vet can organise this for you and will send the x-rays off to be scored and will relay your dog’s results to you.

Why use the BVA/KC scheme?

The BVA/KC hip dysplasia schemes operate to the highest standards of expertise, quality and consistency, which means breeders can have complete confidence in the rigour and accuracy of the scoring and grading processes.  The schemes also contribute to The Kennel Club’s unique database of hip scores, which in turn are used to create our estimated breeding values.

Key features of the schemes include:

  • Highly qualified and experienced vets - The scheme currently has a panel of ten scrutineers who are all veterinary surgeons with advanced professional qualifications in veterinary radiology and/or orthopaedic surgery. They are extremely experienced in the assessment of hip and elbow radiographs, scoring and grading over 16,000 each year
  • Two scrutineers – Radiographs submitted to the scheme are simultaneously assessed by two scrutineers working together as a team, whether side-by-side or remotely, and reaching a consensus on the score/grade
  • Quality and consistency – We only accept high quality radiographs and these are reviewed using high-definition radiology-grade equipment and Visbion imaging software. The panel of scrutineers meet annually to discuss the findings of a quality control exercise and to review a sample of appeal radiographs. This ensures consistency and continuity of results over time.  Random selection of scrutineer pairs ensures that there is continuous peer review within the panel at each scoring/grading session
  • New faster online submission - The new canine health scheme online submission portal means breeders can get their dog’s results returned to them within one week of payment. Breeders can also ask their vet to sign them up for automatic email updates on the status of their submissions, so they are kept informed on its progress.
  • Appeals process – The BVA/KC scheme has a robust appeals process that is open to any breeder who disagrees with the score/grade for their dog. The radiographs are re-scored by a different pair of scrutineers who are unaware of the original score, and then reviewed by the chief scrutineer. The final appeal score is therefore based on the professional opinion of five scrutineers

How are the results used?

The total hip scores are published and can be compared with the median score for the breed (the score of the average dog in that breed, with equal numbers of dogs scoring higher and lower). Since dog breeds vary widely in the incidence of hip dysplasia, this allows individual dogs to be compared with others in the same breed, showing whether they are average, or better or worse, in their hip status.

Hip scores of both individual Kennel Club registered dogs and their relatives are published online via our health test results finder and are used to produce our estimated breeding values resource for the most commonly scored breeds. This links information about a dog's family (its pedigree information) with data from the BVA/KC health schemes. By linking this data together and looking at a dog's surrounding family it helps us estimate the types of genes a dog has and those that could be passed on to its puppies. This service is unique worldwide in dog breeding and is underpinned by the close working relationship between The Kennel Club and BVA.

Essentials of the scheme

When taking your dog for its x-ray, owners should remember that:

  • Your dog must be at least 1 year old, but there is no upper age limit
  • Your dog must be permanently and uniquely identified by way of a microchip or tattoo
  • Your dog’s registration certificate from The Kennel Club and any related transfer certificates must be available so that the appropriate details can be printed on the radiographs
  • microchip/tattoo numbers must also be printed on the radiographs
  • You should sign the declaration (first part) of the certificate, to verify the details are correct and grant permission for the use of the results in data collection and research
Information for vets

Veterinary practices can submit radiographs for scoring under the BVA/KC Hip Dysplasia Scheme here: CHS online submission portal (bva.co.uk). Before making a submission, please visit the BVA’s website and read the Procedure Rules and Regulations explaining the requirements and procedure for radiography.

If you have any questions regarding the submission process, please contact them via email.

Can veterinary practices submit radiographs online?

Yes, the scheme accepts online submissions from vet practices, and over half are now submitted online. There are plans to further increase the volume of online submissions and to gradually phase out paper-based submissions. The scheme is now able to score submissions with two scrutineers working as a pair remotely, and are currently running in-person scoring sessions in parallel with remote sessions.

Find out more about online submissions.

How do the BVA/KC schemes compare to other international schemes?

In many other schemes one scrutineer works alone and independently, with no central body providing oversight, and no ongoing quality control or validation. This means that scores or grades may lack consistency and reliability.  Some schemes accept lower quality images (e.g. JPEG files) whereas we only accept medical grade DICOM image files.

While scores or grades from other schemes can assess the degree of hip or elbow disease,  the results from other schemes are not directly comparable with the BVA/KC scheme and so this data cannot be used to inform estimated breeding values

Where can I get more information on the BVA/KC Scheme?

For further information on the scheme, please visit the BVA website.

What are the scores my dog may receive?

Each hip joint is assessed by BVA/KC scrutineers who assign points based on nine aspects of each hip joint. The degree to which a dog is affected by hip dysplasia is represented by a score given to each hip. This score ranges from 0 to 106 (0 to 53 for each hip), with a score of 0 representing the least degree of hip dysplasia and 53 representing the most.

Are my dog's results published?

The names and results of dogs registered with The Kennel Club will be sent to us for recording on our database and will be made available:

Costs of the scheme

In addition to the charges levied by your vet for anaesthetic and x-raying, the cost of having one a dog graded under the scheme can be found below. Assured breeders get a 15% discount. There is a reduced fee when radiographs are submitted simultaneously to the BVA/KC Hip and Elbow Dysplasia Schemes.

Scheme costs

Submission type

Charge (including VAT)

Assured Breeders/SSPCA discount

Single submission

£77.40

£65.70

Joint Hip and Elbow

£140.70

£119.64

Appeal

£140.70

 

Find a dog's hip score result or EBV score

Our Health Test Results Finder can help you find any results from the BVA/KC Hip Dysplasia Scheme or any DNA tests and health screening schemes that we record. This tool can help you make informed decisions, whether you're a breeder trying to find a suitable healthy mate for your dog, or a puppy buyer wanting to know more about the health of a puppy's parents. 

Breeding advice

An average (or median) score is calculated for all breeds scored under the scheme and advice for breeders is to choose breeding stock with hip scores around and ideally below the breed median score, depending on the level of hip dysplasia in the breed. Find information about the median score for your breed.

It is recommended that hip scores of a dog’s family members should also be considered. To find another dog's hip scores, whether that's a dog related to your dog, or a potential mate, then visit our summary of breed specific information.

Breeding advice using estimated breeding values (EBVs)

Data from the BVA/KC Hip Dysplasia Scheme can be used to estimate genetic ‘risk’ for each dog. EBVs use this data to help breeders of pedigree dogs to continue to make sensible and informed health conscious choices for breeding, based on robust data. EBVs provide a more accurate measurement of genetic risk than using a dog's hip score alone. It is therefore recommended that EBV breeding advice is used where possible. 

To find either your own dog's EBV score, or the score of another dog, visit our Health Test Results Finder.

Detailed breeding advice

General advice

Ideally breeders should use dogs that that have an EBV which is lower than average (i.e. a minus number), and preferably with a confidence rating of at least 60%. Dogs with an EBV with a confidence less than 60% can still be used, but the higher the confidence, the more accurate the EBV will be. 

Lower doesn't have to be lowest

The lower the EBV, the better, but breeders do not need to search out the dogs with the lowest risk EBV. Selecting animals with a lower risk EBV than average will still lower the risk of hip dysplasia in the breed as a whole. 

EBVs help you make balanced breeding decisions

It is recommended that breeders make well balanced breeding decisions. At birth, each puppy will have an EBV that is the average of its parents. Therefore, dogs with an EBV which is higher than average can still be bred from, providing that it is mated to a dog with an EBV which is well below average (assuming that the confidence for both dogs is high). 

EBVs help maintain genetic diversity

Previously, the best advice was to ideally use dogs with a hip score of 0, which meant that many dogs could have been excluded from a breeding plan if their scores were a significant consideration. Excluding dogs from a breeding plan can have an impact on genetic diversity. By using EBVs, it is reasonable to use a dog with less than ideal individual BVA/KC scores, as long as the EBV indicates low genetic risk with good confidence. In such cases the hip condition of the offspring should be carefully monitored and preferably they should be hip scored themselves.

Making balanced breeding decisions

As well as considering the implications of a dog’s EBV or hip score, there are other equally important factors to consider when deciding whether two dogs should be mated together, such as temperament, genetic diversity, conformation, other available health test results, the general health of the dogs etc. Your breeding decisions should always be well balanced and take into consideration the qualities and compatibility of both the sire and dam that you are considering.

Can the results of the scoring scheme or EBVs be used to precisely predict if future puppies will be affected?

Hip dysplasia is a condition which is inherited in a complicated way not yet fully understood by scientists. Due to the complex nature of inheritance of this condition, it is still possible that affected offspring may arise from parents which have good EBVs. It is hoped that breeding appropriately from screened dogs will reduce the risk of producing affected offspring, and using EBVs reduces this risk even further, but it must be stressed that this is not a guarantee.

Will a DNA test for hip dysplasia be developed in the near future?

No. Hip dysplasia is a complex inherited disorder and is caused by a number of different genes and is also influenced by several environmental factors. DNA tests can be developed for conditions controlled by only one gene to definitively predict whether a dog will be clear, a carrier or affected, but not for conditions controlled by more than one gene.

What statistics are known about hip dysplasia?

Statistics on the number of dogs scored by the scheme and their results can be accessed in our hip dysplasia breed-specific information.