| Literature DB >> 35324835 |
Ana Mafalda Rasteiro1,2, Eva Sá E Lemos1, Paula A Oliveira3, Rui M Gil da Costa3,4,5,6.
Abstract
Cancer of the urinary bladder is a neoplasm with considerable importance in veterinary medicine, given its high incidence in several domestic animal species and its life-threatening character. Bladder cancer in companion animals shows a complex and still poorly understood biopathology, and this lack of knowledge has limited therapeutic progress over the years. Even so, important advances concerning the identification of tumour markers with clinical applications at the diagnosis, prognosis and therapeutic levels have recently been made, for example, the identification of pathological BRAF mutations. Those advances are now facilitating the introduction of targeted therapies. The present review will address such advances, focusing on small animal oncology and providing the reader with an update on this field. When appropriate, comparisons will be drawn with bladder cancer in human patients, as well as with experimental models of the disease.Entities:
Keywords: histology; prognosis; therapeutic marker; transitional cell carcinoma; urothelial carcinoma
Year: 2022 PMID: 35324835 PMCID: PMC8950778 DOI: 10.3390/vetsci9030107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Sci ISSN: 2306-7381
Primary bladder tumours in dogs, types and percentages (the most common tumours reported are shown; adapted from Meuten and Meuten, 2016 [2]).
| Primary Canine Urinary Bladder Tumours | |||
|---|---|---|---|
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| (%) |
| (%) |
| Transitional cell carcinoma | 75–90 | Papilloma | 2 |
| Undifferentiated carcinoma | 6 | ||
| Adenocarcinoma | 4 | Adenoma | 0.2 |
| Squamous cell carcinoma | 3 | ||
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| Leiomyosarcoma | 2 | Leiomyoma | 2 |
| Sarcoma | 1.5 | ||
| Rhabdomyosarcoma | 1.3 | ||
| Haemangiosarcoma | 1 | Haemangioma | 0.2 |
| Fibrosarcoma | 1 | Fibroma | 1 |
Classification of canine TCC subtypes based on growth pattern (adapted from Meuten and Meuten, 2016 [2]).
| Canine Transitional Cell Carcinoma Classification |
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| Often multiple and may cover large regions of the mucosa. Form papillary or exophytic growths that project into the lumen of the bladder. Invade the stalk and wall of the bladder, lamina propria, and muscle layers and may be transmural. Mild to marked cellular atypia. Likely to metastasise. |
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| Do not invade the stroma of their own stalk, do not go beyond the lamina propria, so unlikely to metastasise. Differentiation from papilloma is subjective and based on criteria such as overall size, cellular atypia, small branches off the main lesion, among others. Non-invasive tumours may be adjacent to invasive TCC, and additional sections should be searched for invasion. |
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| Form plaques and flat nodules, which can cover large regions of the mucosa. Surfaces are often ulcerated, tumour infiltrates into muscle layers, so high tendency to metastasise. Marked histological and cytological variability. |
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| Rare. Additionally, defined as carcinoma in situ; confined to the epithelium and do not form papillae. Neoplastic epithelium more intensely eosinophilic than non-neoplastic cells; cells may be dysplastic to mildly anaplastic. Loss of intercellular cohesion. Usually located adjacent to invasive carcinoma; if seen, additional section analysis recommended to look for invasion. |
Current and potential markers for clinical applications in canine transitional cell carcinoma.
| Biomarker | Sample | Method | Diagnostic Utility, Commercial Availability | Utility as a Prognostic and/or Therapeutic Target | Power of the Test | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | Specificity | |||||
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| Determination of | Highly sensitive test for detecting TCC cells bearing the | BRAF mutation was not a predictor for histological grade, nor for survival. | 67–88% | 100% | |
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| Rapid latex agglutination dipstick colorimetric test for qualitative detection of tumour analytes in urine. The test uses antibodies to detect a urinary bladder tumour-associated glycoprotein complex. | Useful as a screening test to rule out TCC, especially in dogs at high risk of developing TCC. | N.A. | 88–90% | 35–41% in dogs with non-malignant urinary tract disease; 84–94% in healthy dogs or unhealthy dogs due to non-urinary tract diseases | |
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| ELISA urine test for human and canine bFGF. A quantitative sandwich enzyme immunoassay technique has also been developed using an antibody for canine bFGF. | Urine bFGF could be useful as a diagnostic tumour marker, helping to distinguish dogs with UTI from those with TCC. | Quantification of urine bFGF could be useful as a non-invasive indicator of treatment response. | N.S. | N.S. | |
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| Assessment of urothelial cell ploidy/DNA copy number status in biopsy sections and in urine sediment by FISH. | Non-invasive method for canine TCC diagnosis. | N.A. | N.S. | N.S. | |
| Multiplexed ddPCR assay for the detection and quantification of DNA copy number imbalances/changes characteristic to canine TCC. | Accurate, high-throughput method for evaluation of copy number changes in dogs with TCC. In this study, changes in copy number were not detected in 33% of urine DNA samples from dogs with TCC, which was probably due to the presence of inflammatory cells. Thus, additional techniques to improve sensitivity in those samples may be required. In such cases, FISH will still provide a more accurate evaluation. | N.A. | N.S. | N.S. | ||
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| PCR study of a panel of 22 microsatellite DNA sequences from exfoliated urothelial cells and blood cells; comparison of microsatellites genotypes. | The technique added little value as a diagnostic test for TCC in dogs. | N.A. | 55% (48% *) | 68% (76%, vs. V-BTA) | |
| * When compared with results of V-BTA from the same study. | ||||||
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| QPCR of specific miRNAs involved in the pathophysiology of TCC in humans. | MiR-34a, miR-16, miR-103b and miR-106b could be useful diagnostic biomarkers for the identification of dogs with TCC. | N.A. | N.S. | N.S. | |
| MiR-103b and miR-16 are potential non-invasive diagnostic biomarkers for TCC; particularly for distinguishing LUTD and TCC in canine urine samples. | N.A. | N.A. | N.S. | |||
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| PCR-based telomeric repeat amplification protocol for detection/measurement of telomerase activity. | Telomerase activity may be useful in diagnosing canine TCC in urine samples in a clinical context. Results of the assay are either telomerase-positive or telomerase-negative. Urine samples containing other telomerase-positive cells may yield false-positive results (e.g., presence of activated lymphocytes in dogs with bacterial cystitis). False-negative results may occur with unappropriated urine samples storage. | N.A. | 91% | 89% | |
| Diagnostic sensitivity/specificity of the TRAP assay applied to clinical canine urine samples. | ||||||
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| Species-specific radioimmunoassays to measure urine concentrations of canine calgranulins S100A8/A9 and S100A12. | Results presented as normalised to urine specific gravity levels (S100A8/A9USG) and as S100A8/A9-to-S100A12 ratio (UcalR). Provides quantitative results. | N.A. | 96% S100A8/A9USG * | 66% S100A8/A9USG * | |
| * For detection of TCC/PC in dogs ≥ 6 y.o.; ** to distinguish dogs with TCC/PC from dogs with UTI in dogs ≥ 6 y.o. | ||||||
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| Characterisation of the canine urinary proteome by using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry and immunoblot. | A protein signature was identified, that could distinguish between healthy patients and those with TCC or UTIs. A statistical model using a biomarker multiplex for categorising samples as TCC or non-TCC was developed, predicting the presence of disease with 90% confidence. Potential relevance of the identified proteins as biomarkers for the diagnosis of TCC in dogs. Preliminary study, high-throughput technique. A more direct assay will be useful for clinical diagnosis. | N.A. | N.S. | N.S. | |
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| Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy-based metabolite profiling analysis. | Six metabolites showed significantly higher levels in dogs with TCC compared to controls: urea, choline, methylguanidine, citrate, acetone and β-hydroxybutyrate. Good sensitivity to predict the healthy control and disease samples. Potential for early detection of bladder cancer. Preliminary study, high-throughput technique. | N.A. | 86% | 78% | |
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| Imaging analysis to examine lipidome/lipid profiles, using desorption electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry. | Differentiation of canine cancerous bladder tissue and cutaneous metastasis from noncancerous canine bladder tissue samples. Different lipid distributions between healthy and diseased tissues. | N.A. | N.S. | N.S. | |
| Analysis of lipid profiles using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. | Unique lipid profiles were found among dogs with TCC, dogs with UTI, and healthy dogs. Specific statistical analyses allowed their differentiation. Concentrations of the specific lipids could not be determined, and thus the study did not conclude which lipid families were up or downregulated. Foundation for further research on urinary lipids as potential biomarkers for TCC. Non-invasive method. | N.A. | N.S. | N.S. | ||
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| Immunohistochemistry for detection of survivin, an apoptosis-inhibiting protein; RT-PCR analysis for the survivin gene. | Initial phases of investigational development with limited samples. Additional research needed to investigate potential role of nuclear survivin as an early marker for bladder tumours, as well as in the development, progression and as a therapeutic target. | N.A. | N.S. | N.S. | |
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| IHC and qPCR analysis for EGFR. | EGFR expression could potentially be used as a marker to aid canine TCC diagnosis. It may improve the sensitivity of urine cytological diagnosis when provisional diagnosis is needed. | Not useful for predicting prognosis of TCC. | 72% | 100% | |
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| IHC for HER-2. | N.A. | Potential maker of malignancy and therapeutic target in canine TCC. | N.S. | N.S. | |
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| IHC for expression of VEGFR2, PDGFR-β, c-KIT. | PDGFR-β could play a role in canine TCC tumourigenesis. | PDGFR-β and VEGFR2 might be involved in mediating clinical response of TCC to toceranib. | N.S. | N.S. | |
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| IHC and PCR assay for CD3 and granzyme B. | N.A. | Granzyme B+ tumour-infiltrating cells could be involved in inhibition of tumour progression, and a favourable prognosis. | N.S. | N.S. | |
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| IHC for p63. | P63 could potentially be used as a clinical marker for diagnosing canine TCC. | P63 could potentially be used as a clinical marker for predicting prognosis in canine TCC. | N.S. | N.S. | |
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| IHC for UP III, CK 7 and CK20. | UP III is the most common marker of urothelial differentiation used in dogs. It was considered the marker of choice in canine urothelial neoplasms. Although UP III is not a specific marker for TCC itself (it does not differentiate neoplastic from non-neoplastic lesions), it can be useful e.g., to rule in TCC in a biopsy from a tumour of unknown origin and to identify metastatic carcinomas in the skin. | UP III, CK 7, COX-2: | N.S. | N.S. | |
TCC: transitional cell carcinoma; PC: prostatic carcinoma; N.A.: Not available; N.S.: Not specified; y.o.: years old; vs.: versus.