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Gastrointestinal Biome Chicken & Vegetable Stew Wet Dog Food
Hill's Prescription Diet

Gastrointestinal Biome Chicken & Vegetable Stew Wet Dog Food

Verified Jun 30, 2026

Dog · Wet Adult All Breed Sizes

This is a therapeutic canned stew for adult dogs, designed to support sensitive digestion and promote more regular stools. It uses chicken as the main animal protein along with rice, vegetables, and a blend of fibers (including beet pulp, oat fiber, pecan shells, and psyllium) to help modulate the gut microbiome. The formula is complete and balanced for adult maintenance and has been validated through AAFCO feeding trials.

Prescription Meets WSAVA criteria AAFCO No recalls
Official product page
KibbleLab Score
9.1 out of 10

This is a high-quality veterinary therapeutic wet food specifically formulated for adult dogs with gastrointestinal issues. The moderate protein and fat with higher, mixed-fiber content are appropriate for many dogs with chronic or recurrent digestive upset. Because it’s a prescription diet with a carefully designed fiber blend and feeding-trial backing, it’s best suited for dogs under veterinary guidance who need targeted digestive support rather than for healthy dogs as an everyday choice.

The KibbleLab Score (1–10) is assessed from publicly available product data. Our evaluation is science-based, not marketing-based.

Ingredient composition Quality, beneficial additions, absence of artificial colors/flavors
Nutritional profile Protein, fat, fiber evaluated for stated life stage and food type
AAFCO compliance Complete and balanced certification; feeding trials valued higher
Health considerations Sensitivity profile, DCM risk, processing method
9.0 – 10 Top Pick
8.0 – 8.9 Strong Choice
7.0 – 7.9 Solid Option
6.0 – 6.9 Worth a Conversation
Below 6 Not Recommended

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At a Glance

Health Benefits
Digestive Health Probiotic Support Urinary Care
Diet & Compliance
Meets WSAVA criteria Prescription
Suitable For
Adult All Breed Sizes
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Nutritional Perspective

KibbleLab Review

Strengths

  • Formulated and tested through AAFCO feeding trials for complete and balanced adult maintenance, which strongly supports real-world digestibility and nutrient adequacy.
  • Uses chicken as the primary animal protein, with a moderate dry-matter protein level (about 25%) and fat (about 15%) that are often well tolerated in dogs with GI sensitivities.
  • Contains a sophisticated fiber blend (beet pulp, oat fiber, pecan shells, psyllium, citrus pulp, powdered cellulose, pumpkin) plus prebiotic FOS to support the gut microbiome and stool quality.
  • Includes beneficial extras like fish oil (omega-3s), flaxseed (omega-3 and fiber), taurine, and antioxidants (vitamins C and E).

Considerations

  • Contains chicken, pork liver, wheat gluten, soy, and fish ingredients, so it is not appropriate for dogs needing a limited-ingredient or novel-protein diet for food allergies.
  • Relatively high total carbohydrate and fiber on a dry-matter basis, which is intentional for GI support but may not be ideal for dogs that do better on lower-fiber or lower-carb diets.
  • Sodium and mineral levels are tailored for adult maintenance and GI support; this food is not formulated for puppies, pregnant, or lactating dogs.
  • As a therapeutic prescription product, it should be used under veterinary supervision, particularly if your dog has other conditions such as kidney, heart, or severe metabolic disease.
Scored using the rubric of an NAVC Certified Pet Nutrition Coach (PNCC). This is informational, not veterinary advice.

Full Ingredient List

Chicken Broth, Chicken, Pork Liver, Carrots, Rice, Rice Starch, Spinach, Ground Pecan Shells, Oat Fiber, Wheat Gluten, Hydrolyzed Chicken Flavor, Flaxseed, Soybean Oil, Dried Citrus Pulp, Dried Beet Pulp, Potassium Alginate, Whole Grain Barley, Fish Oil, Calcium Chloride, Pumpkin, Pressed Cranberries, Powdered Cellulose, Dicalcium Phosphate, Guar Gum, Calcium Lactate, Calcium Gluconate, Choline Chloride, Potassium Citrate, Sodium Tripolyphosphate, Fructooligosaccharides (FOS), vitamins (Vitamin E Supplement, L-Ascorbyl-2-Polyphosphate (source of Vitamin C), Thiamine Mononitrate, Niacin Supplement, Calcium Pantothenate, Vitamin B12 Supplement, Pyridoxine Hydrochloride, Biotin, Riboflavin Supplement, Vitamin D3 Supplement, Folic Acid), Ginger, Psyllium Seed Husk, Taurine, L-Threonine, L-Tryptophan, Magnesium Oxide, minerals (Zinc Oxide, Ferrous Sulfate, Manganese Sulfate, Copper Sulfate, Calcium Iodate).

Ingredients and analysis reflect manufacturer data at the time of our last update and can change without notice. Always check the actual product packaging before feeding.

Ingredient filtering helps identify compatible options but is not a substitute for a veterinary elimination diet.

Top 5 Ingredients Explained

01
Chicken Broth
Chicken broth is commonly used in pet foods and toppers as a flavorful liquid base or gravy to improve palatability and add moisture, providing modest amounts of soluble protein, electrolytes and minerals. It can help encourage eating and increase hydration, but owners should choose low‑sodium, onion‑ and garlic‑free formulations (or make homemade broth), since commercial broths may contain excessive salt, seasonings or additives that are unsafe or unsuitable for dogs and cats.
02
Chicken
Chicken is a common animal-based protein in dog and cat foods, supplying essential amino acids, B vitamins, and energy-dense fats that support muscle maintenance, growth, and overall health; for cats it also contributes toward dietary taurine but must be present in sufficient amounts or provided via supplementation. It is prized for its digestibility and palatability, though some pets develop sensitivities or allergies to chicken, and nutritional value and safety depend on ingredient quality and processing—raw chicken carries pathogen risks and whole bones can pose choking or GI hazards.
03
Pork Liver
Pork liver is an organ meat used in pet foods as a nutrient‑dense source of high‑quality protein and concentrated vitamins and minerals—notably vitamin A, B vitamins (including B12 and folate), iron and copper—that support red blood cell production, skin/coat condition and overall metabolism. Because liver is very rich in vitamin A and certain minerals, it should be included in limited amounts to avoid hypervitaminosis A or mineral imbalances and must be properly processed to reduce pathogen risk; pets with urinary stone issues or a pork sensitivity should use caution.
04
Carrot
Carrot is used in pet foods as a vegetable ingredient providing fiber, moisture, texture and antioxidant nutrients such as beta‑carotene (a provitamin A), vitamin K, vitamin C and potassium, contributing to palatability and digestive bulk. Cooked carrots are more digestible and release more beta‑carotene, but cats cannot efficiently convert beta‑carotene to active vitamin A so carrots are more nutritionally useful for dogs than as a primary vitamin A source for cats; they should be fed in moderation due to natural sugars and should be offered in appropriately sized pieces to avoid choking.
05
Rice
Rice is a common carbohydrate source and binder in dog and cat foods, supplying readily digestible energy and often used in formulations for sensitive stomachs or hypoallergenic diets. White rice is gentle and easy to digest while brown rice provides more fiber and micronutrients, but rice is low in essential amino acids, has a relatively high glycemic index, and can accumulate trace arsenic, so it should not be relied on as a primary protein and portions should be considered for diabetic or weight‑management pets.

Nutritional Breakdown

How to read As Fed versus Dry Matter As fed shows the numbers straight off the label, water included. Dry matter removes the water so you can compare a wet food and a dry food fairly.
Dry Matter Basis
Protein (typical)
25.30%
Low AAFCO min: 18% High
Fat (typical)
15.10%
Low AAFCO min: 5.5% High
Crude Fiber (typical)
7.30%
Low Typical: 3–5% High
287
kcal / Oz
287
kcal / G
Moderate
Calorie density category
What is calorie density How many calories the food packs per unit. Denser foods mean smaller portions for the same calories.

Product Details & Brand

Product Specs

Lifestage Adult
Breed size All Breed Sizes
Texture Stew
Processing method Canned
Food type Wet

AAFCO Nutritional Adequacy
What is AAFCO Association of American Feed Control Officials. It sets the nutritional adequacy standards US pet foods are measured against.

Complete & balanced Yes
AAFCO life stages Adult Maintenance
Substantiation Feeding Trials
Animal feeding tests using AAFCO procedures substantiate that provides complete and balanced nutrition for maintenance of adult dogs.

Brand

Hill's Prescription Diet

Hill's Prescription Diet offers clinically formulated therapeutic nutrition designed to help manage specific health conditions in pets such as kidney disease, urinary issues, skin sensitivities, digestive problems, and weight management. Sold primarily through veterinarians, it's backed by research from Hill's Pet Nutrition Center and veterinary nutritionists.

Visit Hill's Prescription Diet
Price tier $$$$$
WSAVA Meets criteria

WSAVA publishes criteria for evaluating a manufacturer (qualified nutritionists, feeding trials, published research); it does not certify or endorse brands.

Manufacturer

Company name Hill's Pet Nutrition
Parent company Colgate-Palmolive Company
Founded 1907
Headquarters Topeka, Kansas, USA
Manufacturing type In House
Manufacturing country United States
Manufacturing region Kansas
Manufacturing oversight

Hill's Pet Nutrition maintains strict quality and safety standards in all of its manufacturing sites, with adherence to rigorous ingredient testing and safety validation procedures. Facilities follow current Good Manufacturing Practices (cGMPs) and are regularly audited for quality, safety, and consistency. All products meet or exceed AAFCO and FDA regulatory standards for pet food.

Manufacturing details are compiled from public sources and not independently verified; they may not reflect contract manufacturing or co-packing.

Recall History

No recalls on record

Hill's Prescription Diet Gastrointestinal Biome Chicken & Vegetable Stew Wet Dog Food has no recalls since 2014.

Source: FDA Pet Food Recall Database · Monitored daily

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KibbleLab food report
TOP TIER.
9.1 /10 Grade A+
Gastrointestinal Biome Chicken & Vegetable Stew Wet Dog Food
Hill's Prescription Diet · kibblelab.com

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Frequently Asked Questions

Has Hill's Prescription Diet ever been recalled?

We have no recalls on record for Hill's Prescription Diet. We monitor the FDA Pet Food Recall Database daily.

How does KibbleLab rate foods?

Our scores are based on ingredient composition, nutritional profile, AAFCO compliance, and health considerations. We don't penalize by-products, grains, or synthetic preservatives. Brands cannot pay for higher scores.

Is KibbleLab a substitute for veterinary advice?

No. KibbleLab provides data-driven food analysis, not medical advice. Always consult your veterinarian before making dietary changes, especially for pets with health conditions.

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KibbleLab provides informational content only. This is not veterinary advice. Always consult a qualified veterinarian before changing your pet's diet.

KibbleLab may earn affiliate commissions through product links. No one can pay for a higher score, or to change what we recommend for your pet.

Product data sourced from manufacturer websites, AAFCO statements, and FDA recall database. Last verified dates reflect our most recent data check.