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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Tumor size linked to bone enzyme levels in dogs with bone cancer

By Sternberg, R A et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2013·Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Association between absolute tumor burden and serum bone-specific alkaline phosphatase in canine appendicular osteosarcoma.

Species:
dog
OsteosarcomaMovement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 96 dogs with appendicular osteosarcoma (a type of bone cancer) was studied to see how their tumor size affected a specific blood marker called bone-specific alkaline phosphatase (BALP). The results showed that higher levels of BALP were linked to larger tumors and more advanced stages of the disease. For dogs without visible metastases (spread of cancer), higher BALP levels indicated a larger primary tumor. In dogs with metastases, BALP levels increased as the cancer progressed. This suggests that monitoring BALP levels could help veterinarians assess the severity of osteosarcoma in dogs.

People also search for: dog osteosarcoma treatment · high alkaline phosphatase in dogs · dog cancer prognosis

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In dogs with appendicular osteosarcoma (OSA), increased pretreatment serum bone-specific alkaline phosphatase (BALP) activity is a negative prognostic factor, associated with shorter disease-free intervals and survival times, but a biologic basis for observed differential serum BALP activities in canine OSA patients remains incompletely defined. OBJECTIVE: Serum BALP activity will correlate with absolute tumor burden in dogs with OSA. ANIMALS: This study included 96 client-owned dogs with appendicular OSA. METHODS: In canine OSA cell lines, the expression and membranous release of BALP was evaluated in vitro. The correlation between serum BALP activity and radiographic primary tumor size was evaluated in OSA-bearing dogs. In dogs developing visceral OSA metastases, serial changes in serum BALP activities were evaluated in relation to progression of macroscopic metastases, and visceral metastatic OSA cells were evaluated for BALP expression. RESULTS: In vitro, BALP expression was not associated with either tumorigenic or metastatic phenotype, rather the quantity of membranous BALP released was proportional with cell density. In dogs devoid of macroscopic metastases, there was a positive correlation between serum BALP activity and absolute primary tumor size. In dogs with progressive OSA metastases, serum BALP activity increased and coincided with the development of macroscopic metastases. OSA cells derived from visceral metastatic lesions retained BALP expression. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Tumor burden is a determinant of serum BALP activity in dogs with appendicular OSA. The association between increased pretreatment BALP activity and negative clinical prognosis may simply be attributed to greater initial tumor burden, and consequently more advanced tumor stage.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23734720/