Frontiers in Oncology (Apr 2020)

Naturally-Occurring Canine Mammary Tumors as a Translational Model for Human Breast Cancer

  • Mark Gray,
  • James Meehan,
  • Carlos Martínez-Pérez,
  • Charlene Kay,
  • Arran K. Turnbull,
  • Linda R. Morrison,
  • Lisa Y. Pang,
  • David Argyle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2020.00617
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Despite extensive research over many decades, human breast cancer remains a major worldwide health concern. Advances in pre-clinical and clinical research has led to significant improvements in recent years in how we manage breast cancer patients. Although survival rates of patients suffering from localized disease has improved significantly, the prognosis for patients diagnosed with metastatic disease remains poor with 5-year survival rates at only 25%. In vitro studies using immortalized cell lines and in vivo mouse models, typically using xenografted cell lines or patient derived material, are commonly used to study breast cancer. Although these techniques have undoubtedly increased our molecular understanding of breast cancer, these research models have significant limitations and have contributed to the high attrition rates seen in cancer drug discovery. It is estimated that only 3–6% of drugs that show promise in these pre-clinical models will reach clinical use. Models that can reproduce human breast cancer more accurately are needed if significant advances are to be achieved in improving cancer drug research, treatment outcomes, and prognosis. Canine mammary tumors are a naturally-occurring heterogenous group of cancers that have several features in common with human breast cancer. These similarities include etiology, signaling pathway activation and histological classification. In this review article we discuss the use of naturally-occurring canine mammary tumors as a translational animal model for human breast cancer research.

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