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Canine mammary gland tumours; a histological continuum from benign to malignant; clinical and histopathological evidence*
Authors:K U Sorenmo  V M Kristiansen  M A Cofone  F S Shofer  A‐M Breen  M Langeland  C M Mongil  A M Grondahl  J Teige  M H Goldschmidt
Institution:1. School of Veterinary Medicine of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA;2. Norwegian School of Veterinary Science, Oslo, Norway;3. Mari Lowe Center for Comparative Oncology, University of Pennsylvania, PA, USA;4. Veterinary Specialty Center of Delaware, Wilmington, DE, USA;5. Centro de Especialistas Veterinarios de Puerto Rico, Puerto Rico
Abstract:This study describes the clinical and histopathological findings in dogs with mammary gland tumours, and compares the histopathological and clinical evidence consistent with progression from benign to malignant to human breast cancer epidemiology. Clinical and histopathological data on 90 female dogs with 236 tumours was included. Dogs with malignant tumours were significantly older than dogs with benign tumours (9.5 versus 8.5 years), P = 0.009. Malignant tumours were significantly larger than benign tumours (4.7 versus 2.1 cm), P = 0.0002. Sixty‐six percent had more than one tumour, and evidence of histological progression was noted with increasing tumour size. Dogs with malignant tumours were significantly more likely to develop new primary tumours than dogs with benign tumours, P = 0.015. These findings suggest that canine mammary tumours progress from benign to malignant; malignant tumours may be the end stage of a histological continuum with clinical and histopathological similarities to human breast carcinogenesis.
Keywords:breast cancer  comparative oncology  dog  malignant transformation  tumour
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