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Research
Finds Similarities In Dog, Human Breast Cancer Pre-Malignant
Lesions
Thursday, November 15, 2007
These
two images are examples of a mammary lesion in tissue
surrounding a tumor from a dog (left) and one in human
mammary tissue (right). Purdue research shows that the
similarity between canine and human lesions associated with
breast cancer makes dogs an ideal model to study progression
of the disease while it is still treatable.
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Credit:
Sulma Mohammed, Purdue University School of Veterinary Medicine
Pre-malignant mammary
lesions in dogs and humans display many of the same
characteristics, a discovery that could lead to better
understanding of breast cancer progression and prevention for
people and pets, said a Purdue University scientist from the
School of Veterinary Medicine.
A group of scientists including
Sulma Mohammed have found similarities between benign lesions
that are considered to carry risk for developing breast cancer in
both canines and humans. Breast cancer is the second leading
cause of cancer deaths in women.
"Dogs develop these
lesions spontaneously in contrast to other available models and
are exposed to the same environmental risk factors as humans,"
said Mohammed, an associate professor in comparative
pathobiology. "These shared features make the dog an ideal
model to compare the breast lesions that will progress to cancer
and those that will regress. Such a model will facilitate
customized treatment and prevention strategies."
Due to the success of
mammographic screening and awareness by women, abnormal cell
growth within breast tissues is frequently diagnosed, Mohammed
said. These intraepithelial lesions are recognized risk factors
for invasive cancer, and their presence affects patient
management decisions.
"Once a lesion is
identified, it can be treated with hormonal therapy if it is
estrogen receptor (ER)-positive, but for low-risk and ER-negative
lesions, we can't do anything but wait and watch to see if it
grows into a tumor," Mohammed said. "With a dog model,
we could study these lesions and test different prevention
modalities before it becomes a cancer."
The research appears in this
month's issue of the Journal of Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers,
and Prevention. Mohammed's co-authors include Sunil Badve from
Indiana University; Margaret (Peg) Miller, Jun Xie and Elisabetta
Antuofermo from Purdue; and Salvatore Pirino from the Sassari
University School of Veterinary Medicine in Sardinia, Italy.
The scientists studied 212
tissue biopsies from 200 female dogs with tumors that were
retrieved from the archives of the Purdue Animal Disease
Diagnostic Laboratory and the Veterinary Teaching Hospital as
well as from the Institute of General Pathology and Anatomical
Pathology at Sassari University.
The canine slides were compared
to human specimens collected from the Department of Pathology at
the IU School of Medicine. Mohammed said the focus of the study
was not on the tumor but on the precancerous, or preneoplasia,
lesions in tissue around the tumor.
"We found that
preneoplasia lesions are virtually identical, microscopically, in
dogs and women," she said. "In fact, many of the slides
were so similar it was often difficult to determine if they were
from dogs or people without looking at the label."
In particular, Mohammed said,
they wanted to examine each type of mammary intraepithelial
lesion for estrogen receptors expression. Recently, scientists
have concluded that breast cancer is not a single disease, but a
group of malignancies.
"Establishing an animal
model is paramount for testing new treatment and prevention
modalities, especially for lesions that express none of the
targeted receptors, such as triple-negative types, before human
clinical trials," Mohammed said.
The team determined that
because of the frequency of lesions, their association with
spontaneous mammary cancer and the resemblance to human lesions,
dogs may be the ideal model to study human breast cancer
progression as well as prevention and treatment. Mohammed
emphasized that the research results would benefit both dogs and
humans.
According to the American
Cancer Society, 62,030 cases of precancerous malignant lesions
and 178,480 new cases of breast cancer will be diagnosed. There
will be 70,880 women who die from breast cancer this year.
Much of the difficulty in
research on dogs with breast cancer is that the data is outdated,
Mohammed said. According to a 1969 study of female dogs over 4
years old that were not spayed, one out of four were expected to
develop mammary neoplasia, or abnormal cell growth that may
progress to cancer. Thirty percent to 50 percent of canine
mammary tumors were malignant, and 50 percent to 75 percent of
these recurred or metastasized within one to two years.
"Women have become more
aware and conscientious of conducting their own breast
self-exams, and pet owners also are more aware to check their
animals," Mohammed said. "With better diagnostic tools
and early detection, we are able to give dogs the same treatment
that we give humans."
Mohammed said the dogs provide
a more realistic comparison to humans than the mice and rat
models, in part because the tumors developed spontaneously, just
as in humans. Dogs have been evaluated in a few studies, but
rodent research is more common, she said.
"This is a very large,
untapped resource for comparative oncology research,"
Mohammed said. "Unlike laboratory rodents, dogs share a
common environment with people and, therefore, may be exposed to
some of the same carcinogens. Also, because dogs have a shorter
life span than people, it is possible to study mammary lesions
and invasive tumors that develop after a few years instead of
decades."
Miller, a veterinary
pathologist in the Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory, said
that mammary cancer in dogs is one of the most common forms of
cancer studied at the Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory.
"We already had hundreds
of mammary tumor specimens archived in the diagnostic
laboratory," Miller said. "It's a wonderful thing when
we're able to collaborate with other departments at Purdue and
Indiana University with these specimens. There's so much to be
learned from these types of studies."
Tissue samples are kept
indefinitely at the Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory, but
most of the samples in this study were less than a year old, she
said. The records kept for each sample provide opportunities for
follow up if necessary in future studies.
"Diseases such as this are
important to a diagnostic laboratory," Miller said. "Through
diagnostic pathology, we gain knowledge that's useful for
veterinarians and animals, as well as collecting information
that's helpful for people."
The main form of treatment of
breast cancer tumors has been surgical removal. Both Mohammed and
Miller would like to find out if there is a way to identify the
lesion early with noninvasive screening, such as ultrasound or
magnetic resonance imaging.
As a next step, Mohammed will
determine the prevalence of lesions in dogs with no tumors. In
addition, she and Miller are looking at cats, which have a 90
percent malignancy rate when they are diagnosed with breast
cancer.
This research was funded by the
U.S. Department of Defense.
Source:
Purdue University

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