1992, Stella Whitelaw, The Cat Who Wasn't There, Signet (1992), →ISBN, page 152:
But since we were a group of cataholics, everyone longed to win him. He's a beauty . . . see the pointed ears? A very good standard. And the little brick-red leather nose; another good point.
1993, Bruce Fogle, 101 Questions Your Cat Would Ask Its Vet If Your Cat Could Talk, Castle Books (1993), →ISBN, page 78:
This means that if a cat is independent and secure where she lives, and the people moving into her home are cataholics, willing to care for a non-paying guest, then there is no cat reason why she should not stay where she is.
Without the fur and purr, we wouldn't be the cataholics that we are today.
2007, Bruce Fogle, If Your Cat Could Talk, DK Publishing (2007), →ISBN, page 6:
Where once only farmers and "cataholics" kept cats, today they are in all types of households, especially in homes with a history of dog-keeping and little knowledge of feline behavior.
2007, Debra White Smith, Heather, Harvest House Publishers (2007), →ISBN, page 250:
“Maybe I need to send you to House Cats Anonymous,” he teased. “Hello, my name is Jake and I'm a cataholic. I can't stop eating them alive.”
The cats had certainly stolen her thunder, but inwardly she was genuinely pleased for them, after all they weren't to know there were so many cataholics about!
2012, Richard J. Atkinson, Animal Pursuits: A Frivolous Frolic Through the Puntastic Province of Animals, Trafford Publishing (2012), →ISBN, page 84: