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Dogs help in breast carcinoma research

Cancer of the mammary glands in dogs is very similar to human breast carcinoma. For this reason, treatment methods from human medicine are often used for dogs.

carcinoma

Conversely, scientific knowledge gained from canine mammary tumours may also be important to human medicine. Researchers from the University of Zurich were able to show how similar these tumours are in both dogs and humans.

Cancer is one of the most frequent diseases not only in people, but in pets as well. Like people, dogs can also suffer from cancer of the mammary glands (mammary tumours). Dog mammary tumours are very similar to breast carcinoma in humans, and much more so than those of rats or mice, for example. For this reason, research on canine mammary tumours is important for human medicine as well. A study performed at the University of Zurich has now shown how similar mammary tumours are in both people and dogs.

Cancerous cells reprogram healthy cells

For the development of tumours and the progression of a carcinoma, not only the characteristics of the cancer cells themselves are decisive, but also the cells surrounding the tumour play a major role in this. Many tumours even have the capability to reprogram healthy cells in the tumour environment in a way that they start to support the growth of the cancerous cells. This mechanism plays an essential role in human breast carcinoma – but is it the same for dogs? The similarity of breast carcinoma in dogs and humans has been known for a long time. “But whether these tumour cells also influence the surrounding tissue in dogs the same way they do in humans was unknown until now”, explains Enni Markkanen of the Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology of the Vetsuisse Faculty of the University of Zurich.

Archived tissues are of great value to the research

The researchers analysed the surrounding tissue of canine mammary tumours using molecular biology and immune-histological methods. To do this, they could access the tissue archive of the Institute of Veterinary Pathology located at the Animal Hospital. “With the permission of our patient’s owners, we conduct pathological tests to better understand diseases,” says animal pathologist Alexandra Malbon. “In the process, we archive samples of various organs and tissues as these samples can be of great value to answer future research questions.”

Dogs suffering from cancer aid cancer research for humans

In the archived samples of mammary tumours from dog patients, Enni Markkanen and her team were able to prove that some cells in the vicinity of tumours behave the same way as the corresponding cells in humans: In the healthy tissue surrounding the tumour, substances are produced that promote tumour growth.

“Simply speaking, the tumour enslaves its environment: It forces the surrounding cells to work for its benefit,”

Markkanen adds. This mechanism works the same in both humans and dogs. For research on breast carcinoma, tumour tissue of dogs is therefore, among other reasons, much better suitable than tissue from rats or cells cultivated in the laboratory. “Importantly, however, we don’t view our dog patients as test subjects for cancer research,” Markkanen says. “But they can help us to better understand breast carcinoma in both dogs and humans and fight it more effectively.”

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