Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
DogMATIC--A Remote Biospecimen Collection Kit for Biobanking.
- Journal:
- Biopreservation and biobanking
- Year:
- 2015
- Authors:
- Milley, Kristi M et al.
- Affiliation:
- 1 School of Medical Sciences · Australia
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
This research focused on creating a biobank, which is a collection of biological samples, specifically for canine mammary tumors, to help with breast cancer research. The study involved a network of 47 veterinary clinics and three pathology labs across a large area in Australia, making it easier for rural veterinarians to collect and send tumor samples using a special kit called DogMATIC. In the first year, 30 samples were successfully collected, and over 80% of these had high-quality RNA, which is important for research. This project has successfully set up a long-term resource for studying canine tumors and their relevance to human breast cancer. Overall, the treatment of collecting and storing these samples worked well.
Abstract
Canine tumors are valuable comparative oncology models. This research was designed to create a sustainable biobank of canine mammary tumors for breast cancer research. The aim was to provide a well-characterized sample cohort for specimen sharing, data mining, and long-term research aims. Canine mammary tumors are most frequently managed at a local veterinary clinic or hospital. We adopted a biobank framework based on a large number of participating veterinary hospitals and clinics acting as collection centers that were serviced by a centralized storage facility. Recruitment was targeted at rural veterinary clinics. A tailored, stable collection kit (DogMATIC) was designed that was used by veterinarians in remote or rural locations to collect both fresh and fixed tissue for submission to the biobank. To validate this methodology the kit design, collection rate, and sample quality were analyzed. The Australian Veterinary Cancer Biobank was established as a network of 47 veterinary clinics and three veterinary pathology laboratories spanning over 200,000 km(2). In the first 12 months, 30 canine mammary tumor cases were submitted via the DogMATIC kit. Pure intact RNA was isolated in over 80% of samples with an average yield of 14.49 μg. A large network biobank, utilizing off-site collection with the DogMATIC kit, was successfully coordinated. The creation of the Australian Veterinary Cancer Biobank has established a long-term, sustainable, comparative oncology research resource in Australia. There are broader implications for biobanking with this very different form of collection and banking.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26186583/