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9Lives, EverPet, and Special Kitty Canned Cat Food Recall

The J.M. Smucker Company today announced a limited voluntary recall on certain lots of 9Lives, EverPet, and Special Kitty canned cat food due to possible low levels of thiamine (Vitamin B1).

The J.M. Smucker Company today announced a limited voluntary recall on certain lots of 9Lives, EverPet, and Special Kitty canned cat food due to possible low levels of thiamine (Vitamin B1).

The issue was discovered by the Quality Assurance team during review of production records at the manufacturing facility. No illnesses related to this issue have been reported to date and the product is being recalled out of an abundance of caution.

Cats fed diets low in thiamine for several weeks may be at risk for developing a thiamine deficiency. Thiamine is essential for cats. Symptoms of deficiency displayed by an affected cat can be gastrointestinal or neurological in nature. Early signs of thiamine deficiency may include decreased appetite, salivation, vomiting, and weight loss. In advanced cases, neurological signs can develop, which include ventroflexion (bending towards the floor) of the neck, wobbly walking, circling, falling, and seizures. Contact your veterinarian immediately if your cat is displaying any of these symptoms. If treated promptly, thiamine deficiency is typically reversible.

The affected product was distributed to a limited number of retail customers from December 20 through January 3, 2017.

The affected production includes the following:

Brand Product Description UPC Code Consumer Unit Lot Numbers Units per Case Selling Unit Size UPC Code on Case
9Lives Meaty Pate Chicken and Tuna 7910052238 6354803 12 13 oz 7910052228
9Lives Meaty Pate Seafood Platter 7910000402 6356803 24 5.5 oz 7910000402
9Lives Meaty Pate Seafood Platter 7910000367 6355803 6 4pk
5.5 oz each
7910003670
9Lives Meaty Pate Super Supper 7910000327 6358803 24 5.5 oz 7910000327
9Lives Meaty Pate Super Supper 7910000286 6358803 6 4pk
5.5 oz each
7910002860
9Lives Meaty Pate Super Supper 7910052239 6355803 12 13 oz 7910052229
9Lives Meaty Pate Super Supper 7910052239 6364803 12 13 oz 7910052229
9Lives Meaty Pate with Chicken and Seafood 7910000364 (793641) 6356803 6 4pk
5.5 oz each
7910003640
9Lives Meaty Pate with Chicken and Tuna 7910000324 6356803 24 5.5 oz 7910000324
9Lives Meaty Pate with Chicken Dinner 7910000410 6356803 24 5.5 oz 7910000410
9Lives Meaty Pate with Liver and Chicken 7910000312 (793121) 6355803 6 4pk
5.5 oz each
7910000312
9Lives Meaty Pate with Ocean Whitefish 7910000420 6358803 24 5.5 oz 7910000420
9Lives Seafood Poultry Variety Pack 7910053377 6307803 24 5.5 oz 7910053377
9Lives Meaty Pate with Chicken & Tuna 7910000366 6357803 6 4pk
5.5 oz each
7910003660
EverPet Mixed Grill Dinner 7910053114 6356803 12 13 oz 7910053114
Special Kitty Beef and Liver Dinner 8113112120 6355803 12 13 oz 8113112120
Special Kitty Classic Tuna Dinner 8113112157 6358803 12 13 oz 8113112157
Special Kitty Mixed Grill Dinner with printed wrap 8113109609 6355803 1 12 pk
13 oz each
8113109609
Special Kitty Mixed Grill Dinner without printed wrap 8113112119 6356803 12 13 oz 8113112119
Special Kitty Super Supper 8113179041 6355803 12 13 oz 7910079041

No other products of The J.M. Smucker Company are affected by this recall.

Consumers who have cans of cat food from the impacted lots should stop feeding it to their cats and call us at 1-800-828-9980 Monday through Friday 9:00 AM – 6:00 PM EST or contact us at consumer.relations@jmsmucker.com.

The recall is being conducted in cooperation with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Source: http://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm535382.htm?source=govdelivery&utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery

13 Comments

13 Comments

  1. Jim Fiorillo

    January 3, 2017 at 9:42 pm

    Does anyone at Smucker have an explanation as to why this Thiamine deficiency didn’t show up on their required AAFCO product testing before all this pet food was distributed and sold? Isn’t the point of product testing to ensure the product meets the required specifications before it is marketed? Why is a recall necessary? Will Smucker be fined?

    • Susan Thixton

      January 3, 2017 at 9:46 pm

      Hi Jim –
      AAFCO has no requirements for product testing, AAFCO has no enforcement authority at all. They write the regulations and states are supposed to enforce them. But – there is no legal requirement for product testing prior to distribution into the marketplace. Companies should test the product before release, but not all do.

      • Jim Fiorillo

        January 3, 2017 at 10:37 pm

        Thanks, Susan. I was reading Title 21 that states:

        TITLE 21–FOOD AND DRUGS
        CHAPTER I–FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
        DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
        SUBCHAPTER E–ANIMAL DRUGS, FEEDS, AND RELATED PRODUCTS

        PART 507 — CURRENT GOOD MANUFACTURING PRACTICE, HAZARD ANALYSIS, AND RISK-BASED PREVENTIVE CONTROLS FOR FOOD FOR ANIMALS

        Subpart C–Hazard Analysis and Risk-Based Preventive Controls
        Sec. 507.33 Hazard analysis.
        ………….

        “(ii) Chemical hazards, including radiological hazards, substances such as pesticide and drug residues, natural toxins, decomposition, unapproved food or color additives, and nutrient deficiencies or toxicities (such as inadequate thiamine in cat food, excessive vitamin D in dog food, and excessive copper in food for sheep)”

        and I thought FDA might be enforcing this requirement through AAFCO testing,

        My mistake.

        • Susan Thixton

          January 3, 2017 at 10:52 pm

          No – don’t worry. It’s a confusing mess of regulations out there. My understanding is that Good Manufacturing Practices are only “recommended” right now in AAFCO regulations. The Food Safety Modernization Act will change some of that – with stronger GMPs – and I believe required GMPs. But I don’t know enough about the new laws to know what testing will be required prior to market release (but I am going to check).

  2. mikken

    January 3, 2017 at 9:47 pm

    Good question, Jim. Apparently the testing is behind the the shipping. Which seems like something there should change.

    I used to work in a Quality Control laboratory. We didn’t ship anything that wasn’t tested, first. Testing info was included with every shipment.

  3. Jane Democracy

    January 4, 2017 at 2:29 am

    Thiamine levels nor all AAFCO recommended values would never be tested on each batch/lot made. These would be tested when the formulation was created and checked again if an ingredient in the formulation or brand of ingredient was changed or perhaps on a yearly basis. The Quality Assurance personnel check the batching records to ensure the right amount of ingredient was added for each batch and usually this should be done before the product is shipped to stores. The cost to test every ingredient in the AAFCO list would cost $1000-$2000 and take too much time which means pet food manufacturers would either have to add larger warehouses to their facilities or rent storage facilities which are difficult to control. I’m happy they issued a recall… I’m sure some manufacturers would sell it anyway!

  4. Jim Fiorillo

    January 4, 2017 at 10:16 am

    Thanks for the info. … a little disconcerting relative to my prior expectations. I thought Thiamine deficiency in cats was something that everyone understood and had a 99.9+% control among the cat food companies. Now I’m not sure what the control is or what percent of cats who regularly eat commercial cat food are at risk. I thought all of the testing labs had High Performance Liquid Chromatography that was being used on a statistical per-batch sample basis to ensure compliance with FDA / AAFCO. A company like Smucker should probably be able to afford an adequate testing regimen to give consumers the peace of mind that their cats won’t be at risk considering the serious adverse CNS effects …..

    “The neurological manifestations of thiamine deficiency observed in the 3 cats are consistent with those documented previously. Additionally, impaired vision, mydriasis, and ventroflexion of the neck occur in thiamine-deficient cats.
    3,7
    Seizures can progress to coma and death if the thiamine deficiency is not treated. These signs are often preceded by anorexia and vomiting, which can exacerbate the thiamine deficiency.
    3,7
    The progressive encephalopathy has been well documented in Wernicke’s encephalopathy (WE), the acute neuropsychiatric syndrome, and human counterpart of thiamine deficiency.

    • Jane Democracy

      January 4, 2017 at 5:13 pm

      The amount of thiamine in the food would most likely be determined using nutritional formulation software. Where the exact ingredients in their exact amounts are inputted and the software would determine if it meets nutritional requirements for cat, kittens all life stages etc. So as long as they are adding the correct amount, not buying different ingredients and checking ingredients coming in for quality and content (approved supplier, COA etc.) they can test the finished food for that less often. They may test once yearly or more or less depending on their Quality Program. But at the very minimum they should be checking the batching records prior to any food ever leaving the plant.

      • Jim Fiorillo

        January 4, 2017 at 8:38 pm

        Thanks. Great info. Seems like it works MOST of the time. 🙂 Maybe it was a random backup lab assessment that confirms their was a fly in the soup somewhere.

        btw, I’ve never been disappointed with Smucker’s jams.

  5. Jim Fiorillo

    January 4, 2017 at 10:18 am

  6. Colleenyts

    January 4, 2017 at 10:23 am

    I have a friend who’s cat was having seizures after eating Medi-cal senior diet for a few weeks. I thought it might be insufficient protoen to brain since there is very little animal protein in senior diets. After reading these symptoms like circling etc. he was doing as well, it sounds like this could have been the reason. The vet never found the cause of the symptoms so I convinced him to changed his food, and fortunately his seizures did stop afte that.

    • Jim Fiorillo

      January 4, 2017 at 10:58 am

      Possible, but with cats, it could be almost anything — pesticide or herbicide contact can also cause seizures. I’m glad he recovered!

  7. Jim Fiorillo

    January 4, 2017 at 10:25 am

    btw, in case you were wondering where all this pet food is made, it’s right here in Alabama – about 8 miles from my house.

    http://www.petfoodindustry.com/articles/5342-acquisition-of-big-heart-pet-brands-pays-off-for-smuckers

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