Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cell cannibalism in malignant tumors in dogs explained
By Meléndez-Lazo, Antonio et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2015·Departament de Medicina i Cirurgia Animals, Spain·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Cell cannibalism by malignant neoplastic cells: three cases in dogs and a literature review.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 10-year-old female mixed-breed dog with a primary tonsil tumor was found to have cancer cells engulfing healthy immune cells during tests. In another case, a dog with a mammary tumor that had spread to the lungs showed cancer cells consuming each other. A third dog with a severe mast cell tumor also had cancer cells cannibalizing other immune cells. These findings suggest that this unusual behavior of cancer cells might be linked to more aggressive disease and could help explain how tumors evade the immune system. Further research is needed to understand the implications of this phenomenon for treatment and prognosis.
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Abstract
Cell cannibalism refers to the engulfment of cells by nonprofessional phagocytic cells. Studies in human medicine have demonstrated a relationship between the presence of cell cannibalism by neoplastic cells and a poor outcome, and have shown a positive correlation with the presence of metastasis at the time of diagnosis. The biologic significance of cell cannibalism is unknown, but it is proposed that it may represent a novel mechanism of tumor immune evasion as a survival strategy in cases of unfavorable microenvironmental conditions. This report describes clinical and morphologic features of 3 cases of dogs with malignant neoplasia in which the presence of cellular cannibalism was observed in cytologic and histologic specimens. In the 1(st) case, a dog with a primary tonsillar squamous cell carcinoma with metastasis to retropharyngeal lymph nodes had neoplastic epithelial cells engulfing neutrophils noted in cytologic examination of the lymph nodes. In the 2(nd) case, neoplastic epithelial cells were seen engulfing each other in fine-needle aspirates from a primary mammary carcinoma with lung metastasis. In the 3(rd) case, poorly differentiated neoplastic mast cells from a recurrent, metastatic grade III mast cell tumor were observed cannibalizing eosinophils. A brief review of the literature describing known cell-into-cell relationships and the possible biologic significance and mechanisms involved in this phenomenon is provided. The relationship between cell cannibalism and distant metastasis should be explored in further studies, as it may prove to be a criterion of malignancy, as it is proposed in human medicine.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25688652/