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Hormonal Homologies between Canine Mammary Cancer and Human Breast Cancer in a Series of Cases

The validity of spontaneous canine mammary cancer (CMC) as a natural model for the study of human breast cancer (HBC) from a hormonal point of view has never been thoroughly investigated. In this study, we analyzed the immunohistochemical expression of aromatase (Arom) and steroid receptors [estroge...

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Published in:Veterinary sciences 2022-07, Vol.9 (8), p.395
Main Authors: de Andrés, Paloma Jimena, Cáceres, Sara, Illera, Juan Carlos, Crespo, Belén, Silván, Gema, Queiroga, Felisbina Luisa, Illera, Maria José, Pérez-Alenza, Maria Dolores, Peña, Laura
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creator de Andrés, Paloma Jimena
Cáceres, Sara
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Pérez-Alenza, Maria Dolores
Peña, Laura
description The validity of spontaneous canine mammary cancer (CMC) as a natural model for the study of human breast cancer (HBC) from a hormonal point of view has never been thoroughly investigated. In this study, we analyzed the immunohistochemical expression of aromatase (Arom) and steroid receptors [estrogen receptor α (ER α), estrogen receptor β (ER β), progesterone receptor (PR) and androgen receptor (AR)] and intratumor steroid hormone levels of 17β-estradiol (E2), estrone sulfate (SO4E1), progesterone (P4), androstenedione (A4), dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), and testosterone (T) in 78 samples of mammary cancer—51 human breast cancer (HBC) and 27 canine mammary cancer (CMC)—and corresponding controls. Frequency of tumors expressing Arom, ERβ, PR, and AR was similar in both species, whereas ERα+ tumors were less frequent in the canine species. There was a closer similarity between premenopausal HBC and CMC. In HBC and CMC, all hormones assayed were increased in tumors compared to control samples. Intratumor androgen levels were similar in the two species, although levels of progesterone and estrogens were higher in the HBC samples than the CMC samples. Statistical associations among Arom, receptors, and hormones analyzed suggest that the major hormonal influence in both species is estrogenic through the ER, being the α isoform predominant in the human samples. Our findings further support CMC as a spontaneous model for the study of HBC, especially premenopausal HBC, although several differences, such as the more prevalent ERα immunoexpression and higher intratumor levels of estrogens and P4 in HBC, should be taken into account in comparative hormonal studies.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/vetsci9080395
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subjects 17β-Estradiol
Age
Androgen receptors
Androgens
Androstenedione
Animals
Antibodies
Antigens
Aromatase
Breast cancer
canine mammary cancer
Dehydroepiandrosterone
Dogs
Enzymes
Estrogen receptors
Estrogens
Estrone
Females
Histopathology
Hormones
Mammary gland
Metastasis
Progesterone
Species
Steroid hormone receptors
steroid receptors
Steroids
Teaching hospitals
Testosterone
Tumors
Womens health
Xenoestrogens
title Hormonal Homologies between Canine Mammary Cancer and Human Breast Cancer in a Series of Cases
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