Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
PSMA protein differences in dog bladder and prostate cancers
By Matthew R. Berry et al.·Published in BMC Veterinary Research·2022·Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, GB·View original on DOAJ →
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Original publication title: Investigating PSMA differential expression in canine uroepithelial carcinomas to aid disease-based stratification and guide therapeutic selection
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study looked at male dogs with uroepithelial cancers, specifically invasive urothelial carcinoma (iUC) and prostate carcinoma (PCA), to see if a protein called PSMA could help tell them apart. The researchers found that PSMA levels were similar in both types of cancer, meaning it can't be used to differentiate between them. However, they discovered that a chemotherapy drug called vinblastine was effective against both types of cancer cells in the lab. This suggests that vinblastine might be a good treatment option for dogs with these cancers.
People also search for: dog prostate cancer treatment · canine urothelial carcinoma symptoms · vinblastine for dog cancer
Abstract
Abstract Background In male dogs, uroepithelial cancers include invasive urothelial carcinoma (iUC) and prostate carcinoma (PCA). The inability to distinguish iUC involving the prostate from PCA results in indiscriminate clinical management strategies that could be suboptimal as first-line chemotherapy for iUC (cisplatin) and PCA (docetaxel) differ in people. Prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) is a transmembrane protein, and its overexpression has been identified in human prostate carcinoma and neovasculature associated with solid tumor growth. This study investigates whether differential PSMA expression exists between presumptive canine iUC and PCA among cell lines and archived patient samples, which might allow for improved accuracy in disease-based stratification and optimal chemotherapy selection. Additionally, in vitro sensitivities of reported canine iUC and PCA cell lines to uroepithelial directed chemotherapeutic agents were characterized. Results Normalized PSMA gene and protein expressions were not significantly different between 5 iUC and 4 PCA cell lines. PSMA protein expression was uniformly observed in uroepithelial cancers regardless of anatomic origin from archived patient samples, further confirming that PSMA cannot differentiate iUC from PCA. In vitro sensitivity of cell lines to uroepithelial directed chemotherapeutics revealed that vinblastine exerted the broadest cytotoxic activity. Conclusions Differential expression of PSMA was not identified between canine iUC and PCA cell lines or archived patient samples, and PSMA alone cannot be used for disease stratification. Nonetheless given its conserved overexpression, PSMA may be a targetable surface marker for both canine iUC and PCA. Lastly, in uroepithelial carcinomas, vinblastine might exert the broadest anticancer activity regardless of cellular origin.
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Search related cases →Original publication on DOAJ: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12917-022-03544-6