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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Canine mammary tumor rates and breeds in Canary Islands Spain

By Rodríguez, José et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2022·Institute for Animal Health and Food Safety, Spain·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Epidemiology of canine mammary tumours on the Canary Archipelago in Spain.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study in the Canary Islands found that mammary tumors are the most common type of cancer in female dogs, with a notable decrease in their overall frequency over 18 years. Interestingly, more dogs diagnosed with these tumors were neutered, suggesting a possible link between neutering and tumor development. Breeds like Samoyeds, Schnauzers, and Poodles were found to be at higher risk for these tumors, while local breeds had a lower risk. The findings highlight the importance of understanding factors that contribute to mammary tumors in dogs, including breed and management practices.

People also search for: dog mammary tumor symptoms · neutering and dog cancer risk · breeds at risk for mammary tumors

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mammary gland tumours are the most frequently diagnosed tumours in the female dogs but just a few studies have analysed their epidemiology. Therefore, we set out to describe the epidemiology of canine mammary cancer in the Canary Archipelago, Spain. We analysed a pathology tumour registry (PTR) and identified 7362 samples obtained from 5240 female dogs resident on the Canary Archipelago during an 18-year period (2003-2020). Using a case-control study design, we compared mammary tumour affected dogs with the Canarian canine population registry in order to elucidate the breed associations for these tumours. RESULTS: The frequency of a diagnosis of mammary tumours relative to all tumour diagnoses in female dogs decreased during the study period from 62.7% to 48.9%. Contemporaneously, the proportion of dogs diagnosed with mammary tumours who were also neutered increased from 13.6% to 26.9%. There was a negative correlation (R = -0.84) between these changes. Additional findings were that: the proportion of female dogs diagnosed with multiple tumours increased by 23.5% and that the proportion of malignant tumours 89.2% diagnosed has remained stable through the period. Benign mammary tumours were diagnosed at younger ages (9.2 years old) than carcinomas (9.7 years old) and sarcomas (10.4 years old). Epithelial mammary tumours were diagnosed at younger ages in entire female dogs. Samoyed, Schnauzer, Poodle, German Pinscher and Cocker Spaniel were the breeds with the highest odds-ratios (OR) in comparison with the reference (crossbreeds) while Miniature Pinscher, American Staffordshire Terrier, English Pointer as well as some local breeds such as the Canary Warren Hound and the Majorero had the lowest ORs. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides a description of the changing epidemiology of canine mammary cancer in the Canary Archipelago over the last two decades. We found high rates of CMT with a significant predominance of malignant tumours. Exact risk factors are uncertain, but a combination of environmental, regional socioeconomic affecting human and their pets, and animal management factors are likely to play a part. Specifically, neutering was negatively associated with the proportion of epithelial mammary gland tumours and breeds native to the region were at lower risk of mammary tumours. A deeper analysis of all these factors will facilitate a deeper understanding of the epidemiology of mammary gland tumours in both the canine and the human population.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35821034/