Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Estrogen and progesterone receptors in dog sebaceous gland tumors
By Ginel, Pedro J et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2010·Department of Animal Medicine and Surgery, Spain·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Expression of oestrogen and progesterone receptors in canine sebaceous gland tumours.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study looked at 26 dogs with sebaceous gland tumors, which can cause skin lumps, to see how their hormone receptors were affected. The researchers found that healthy dogs had more estrogen and progesterone receptors in their skin glands compared to those with tumors. In particular, the tumors showed significantly lower levels of these receptors, especially in more serious cases like carcinomas. This suggests that changes in hormone receptor levels might play a role in the growth of these tumors.
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Abstract
Sebaceous gland oestrogen alpha (ERalpha) and progesterone (PR) receptor expression was examined immunohistochemically in 26 and 32 dogs respectively with sebaceous gland hyperplasia/adenomas, epitheliomas and carcinomas, and in the glands of 10 healthy controls. The mean percentage of ERalpha positive nuclei in control sebaceous glands was 21.31% compared with 11.5% in hyperplasia/adenoma-type lesions, although these values were not statistically different. In sebaceous gland epitheliomas and carcinomas, positive basal cells represented 7.86% and 3.53% of neoplastic cells respectively and these mean percentages were significantly lower in epitheliomas (P < 0.024) and carcinomas (P < 0.015) than in controls. The mean percentage of PR-positive nuclei in control sebaceous glands was 23.96%, similar to the 22.07% found in hyperplasia/adenoma-type lesions. In sebaceous gland epitheliomas and carcinomas, positive cells were scarce and represented 13.5% and 4.06% of neoplastic cells respectively. Differences in the percentage of positive cells between normal and pathological glands reached statistical significance for carcinomas (P < 0.043). In the control group there was greater PR (P < 0.001) and ERalpha expression (P < 0.014) in sebaceous glands in female dogs. The PR and ERalpha immunoreactivity in each category of neoplastic lesions could not be analysed because sample size was too small but when all the sebaceous gland tumours were grouped and analysed, no sex difference was found. The results suggest that oestrogen and progesterone receptor expression is reduced in some canine sebaceous gland tumours. These changes may represent a contributing factor for tumour growth or simply be a consequence of tumour progression.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20030798/