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Breed profile

Mixed breed & MDR1

Roughly 5% of mixed-breed dogs carry the mutation, per the WSU table.

WSU lists mixed-breed dogs at roughly 5%. The mutation can appear in any dog with affected-breed ancestry, which is impossible to rule out from appearance alone in a mixed-breed dog. If your mixed-breed dog has any herding-breed or sighthound heritage — or an unknown background — a DNA test is the only reliable way to know its MDR1 status before a medication decision.

MDR1 status is one factor among many in your dog's health

A high breed frequency is not a diagnosis, and a positive result is not a crisis. The mutation affects a specific, knowable list of drugs at specific doses. Most affected dogs live entirely normal lives once their owners and vets know the list.

Check any drug for your Mixed breed

The checker is pre-set to the Mixed breed. Pick a drug to get the cite-pinned verdict.

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Which drug for your Mixed breed?

Search by drug name, brand (e.g. Imodium, Heartgard), or class.

This is general information, not veterinary advice for your dog. It does not diagnose or prescribe. Always discuss any medication decision with your veterinarian before acting — they know your dog's full picture, including its MDR1 status if it has been tested. See our disclaimer and how we research.

What a Mixed breed's test result will say

  • Mutant/mutantBoth copies of the gene are mutated. This is the highest-sensitivity genotype. WSU describes affected drugs as causing toxicity in homozygous dogs; reduced doses or avoidance apply most strongly here.
  • Mutant/normalOne copy is mutated and one is normal. This is an intermediate-sensitivity genotype. WSU advises that heterozygous dogs can also experience toxicity and should receive reduced doses of affected drugs.
  • Normal/normalBoth copies are normal. A normal/normal dog does not carry the MDR1 mutation and is not at increased risk from these drugs at normal doses. A DNA test is the only way to confirm a dog is normal/normal.