Hydrolyzed protein is produced when animal or plant proteins are broken into very small peptides and free amino acids through enzymatic or chemical processing. Because the immune system is far less likely to recognize these fragments as allergens, hydrolyzed diets are considered a gold-standard nutritional strategy for food allergy workups and hypoallergenic feeding plans.
| Definition | Protein fragmented by enzymatic or chemical hydrolysis |
| Common sources | Chicken, soy, casein, fish and similar raw materials |
| Primary role | Hypoallergenic protein source |
| Target molecular size | Below 10 kDa, ideally below 3 kDa |
| Digestibility | Usually very high |
| Debate level | Low |
Hydrolyzed protein has documented clinical value in food allergy management and elimination trials. Its main trade-offs are cost, processing intensity, and sometimes lower palatability compared with conventional diets.
Hydrolysis Process
Enzymatic Hydrolysis (Preferred)
Uses proteolytic enzymes under controlled conditions. It gives better peptide-size control and is generally preferred for veterinary hypoallergenic diets.
- Better peptide consistency
Chemical Hydrolysis
Uses acid or alkali treatment. It can reduce allergenicity, but excessive processing may alter amino acids and reduce palatability.
- Less preferred in premium veterinary formulas
Why Is It Hypoallergenic?
Immunologic Mechanism
Food-allergic reactions are usually triggered by larger intact proteins. Hydrolysis reduces those structures into fragments that are less likely to cross-link IgE or trigger immune recognition.
Clinical Use Cases
- Elimination diets: often used for 8 to 12 week food allergy trials.
- Chronic enteropathy or IBD support: useful when highly digestible protein is needed.
- Dermatology cases: commonly selected in pets with suspected cutaneous adverse food reactions.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between hydrolyzed and novel protein?
Novel protein diets rely on ingredients the patient has not eaten before, while hydrolyzed diets use known proteins that are processed into less immunogenic fragments. Both can be used in elimination trials, but hydrolyzed diets are often more standardized.
Why are hydrolyzed diets expensive?
The cost comes from controlled hydrolysis, contamination control, quality testing, and the veterinary distribution channel. Those steps make them much more expensive than standard maintenance foods.
Related VetKriter Tools
References
- Cave NJ. Hydrolyzed protein diets for dogs and cats. Vet Clin North Am Small Anim Pract. 2006.
- Olivry T, Bizikova P. Reduced allergenicity and clinical benefit of food hydrolysates. Veterinary Dermatology. 2010.
- WSAVA Global Nutrition Committee. Nutritional Assessment Guidelines. 2024.