| Literature DB >> 28487862 |
Christopher M Fulkerson1, Deepika Dhawan1, Timothy L Ratliff2,3, Noah M Hahn4, Deborah W Knapp1,3.
Abstract
Genomic analyses are defining numerous new targets for cancer therapy. Therapies aimed at specific genetic and epigenetic targets in cancer cells as well as expanded development of immunotherapies are placing increased demands on animal models. Traditional experimental models do not possess the collective features (cancer heterogeneity, molecular complexity, invasion, metastasis, and immune cell response) critical to predict success or failure of emerging therapies in humans. There is growing evidence, however, that dogs with specific forms of naturally occurring cancer can serve as highly relevant animal models to complement traditional models. Invasive urinary bladder cancer (invasive urothelial carcinoma (InvUC)) in dogs, for example, closely mimics the cancer in humans in pathology, molecular features, biological behavior including sites and frequency of distant metastasis, and response to chemotherapy. Genomic analyses are defining further intriguing similarities between InvUC in dogs and that in humans. Multiple canine clinical trials have been completed, and others are in progress with the aim of translating important findings into humans to increase the success rate of human trials, as well as helping pet dogs. Examples of successful targeted therapy studies and the challenges to be met to fully utilize naturally occurring dog models of cancer will be reviewed.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28487862 PMCID: PMC5401760 DOI: 10.1155/2017/6589529
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Genomics ISSN: 2314-436X Impact factor: 2.326
Similarities and differences in naturally occurring invasive urothelial carcinoma between dogs and humans.
| Similarities between dogs and humans |
| Physiological age of onset and clinical symptoms |
| Pathologically high grade, heterogenous cancer |
| Molecular subtypes (e.g., luminal, basal) |
| Epigenetic features |
| Shared molecular targets (e.g., EGFR, CDKN2B, PIK3CA, BRCA2, and NFkB) |
| Local cancer invasion into the bladder wall |
| Distant cancer metastases in ≥50% of subjects |
| Response to chemotherapy (e.g., cisplatin, carboplatin, and vinblastine) |
| Differences between dogs and humans |
| Sex differences (male : female ratio 2 : 1 in humans, 0.5 : 1 in dogs; although most dogs studied had been spayed or neutered) |
| Tumor location in bladder (more often trigonal in dogs; more variable in humans) |
| Dog tumors possess dog homologue of BRAF V600E mutation common in human melanoma (human InvUC has other variants in MAPK signaling) |