4.6 Article

Cross Species Analysis and Comparison of Tumors in Dogs and Cats, by Age, Sex, Topography and Main Morphologies. Data from Vet-OncoNet

Journal

VETERINARY SCIENCES
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/vetsci9040167

Keywords

cancer; cat; dog; epidemiology; oncology; veterinary

Funding

  1. Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) [UIDB/CVT/00772/2020]

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This study compares the frequencies and associations of tumors in dogs and cats, finding that dogs have higher odds of cancer in the genito-urinary system, spleen, soft tissue tumors, and skin, while cats show higher odds for tumors in the eyes, digestive organs, nasal cavity, lymph nodes, bones, and mammary glands. The study also reveals differences in tumor morphologies, with dogs being more susceptible to mast cell tumors, melanomas, and hemangiosarcomas, while cats are more susceptible to fibrosarcomas, lymphomas, malignant mammary tumors, and squamous cell carcinoma.
The animal cancer burden is essential for the translational value of companion animals in comparative oncology. The present work aims to describe, analyze, and compare frequencies and associations of tumors in dogs and cats based on the Animal Cancer Registry created by Vet-OncoNet. With 9079 registries, regarding 2019 and 2020, 81% (n = 7355) belonged to dogs. In comparison, cats have a general one-year right advance in the mean age of cancer diagnosis compared to dogs. The multivariate topography group analysis shows a distinct pattern between the two species: dogs have higher odds of cancer in the genito-urinary system, spleen, soft tissue tumors and skin, while cats show higher odds for tumors in the eyes, digestive organs, nasal cavity, lymph nodes, bones and mammary glands. Regarding morphologies, dogs are overrepresented in mast cell tumors (MCT), melanomas, and hemangiosarcomas. While cats are overrepresented in fibrosarcomas, lymphomas (T and B-cell), in malignant mammary tumors, and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). Females have greater odds only in the mammary gland, with males having greater odds in six of twelve topographies. This study is the first outcome of continuous animal cancer registration studies in Portugal.

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