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Age at cancer diagnosis by breed, weight, sex, and cancer type in a cohort of more than 3,000 dogs: Determining the optimal age to initiate cancer screening in canine patients

The goal of cancer screening is to detect disease at an early stage when treatment may be more effective. Cancer screening in dogs has relied upon annual physical examinations and routine laboratory tests, which are largely inadequate for detecting preclinical disease. With the introduction of non-i...

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Autores principales: Rafalko, Jill M., Kruglyak, Kristina M., McCleary-Wheeler, Angela L., Goyal, Vidit, Phelps-Dunn, Ashley, Wong, Lilian K., Warren, Chelsea D., Brandstetter, Gina, Rosentel, Michelle C., DiMarzio, Lauren, McLennan, Lisa M., O’Kell, Allison L., Cohen, Todd A., Grosu, Daniel S., Chibuk, Jason, Tsui, Dana W. Y., Chorny, Ilya, Flory, Andi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9891508/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36724177
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0280795
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author Rafalko, Jill M.
Kruglyak, Kristina M.
McCleary-Wheeler, Angela L.
Goyal, Vidit
Phelps-Dunn, Ashley
Wong, Lilian K.
Warren, Chelsea D.
Brandstetter, Gina
Rosentel, Michelle C.
DiMarzio, Lauren
McLennan, Lisa M.
O’Kell, Allison L.
Cohen, Todd A.
Grosu, Daniel S.
Chibuk, Jason
Tsui, Dana W. Y.
Chorny, Ilya
Flory, Andi
author_facet Rafalko, Jill M.
Kruglyak, Kristina M.
McCleary-Wheeler, Angela L.
Goyal, Vidit
Phelps-Dunn, Ashley
Wong, Lilian K.
Warren, Chelsea D.
Brandstetter, Gina
Rosentel, Michelle C.
DiMarzio, Lauren
McLennan, Lisa M.
O’Kell, Allison L.
Cohen, Todd A.
Grosu, Daniel S.
Chibuk, Jason
Tsui, Dana W. Y.
Chorny, Ilya
Flory, Andi
author_sort Rafalko, Jill M.
collection PubMed
description The goal of cancer screening is to detect disease at an early stage when treatment may be more effective. Cancer screening in dogs has relied upon annual physical examinations and routine laboratory tests, which are largely inadequate for detecting preclinical disease. With the introduction of non-invasive liquid biopsy cancer detection methods, the discussion is shifting from how to screen dogs for cancer to when to screen dogs for cancer. To address this question, we analyzed data from 3,452 cancer-diagnosed dogs to determine the age at which dogs of certain breeds and weights are typically diagnosed with cancer. In our study population, the median age at cancer diagnosis was 8.8 years, with males diagnosed at younger ages than females, and neutered dogs diagnosed at significantly later ages than intact dogs. Overall, weight was inversely correlated with age at cancer diagnosis, and purebred dogs were diagnosed at significantly younger ages than mixed-breed dogs. For breeds represented by ≥10 dogs, a breed-based median age at diagnosis was calculated. A weight-based linear regression model was developed to predict the median age at diagnosis for breeds represented by ≤10 dogs and for mixed-breed dogs. Our findings, combined with findings from previous studies which established a long duration of the preclinical phase of cancer development in dogs, suggest that it might be reasonable to consider annual cancer screening starting 2 years prior to the median age at cancer diagnosis for dogs of similar breed or weight. This logic would support a general recommendation to start cancer screening for all dogs at the age of 7, and as early as age 4 for breeds with a lower median age at cancer diagnosis, in order to increase the likelihood of early detection and treatment.
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spelling pubmed-98915082023-02-02 Age at cancer diagnosis by breed, weight, sex, and cancer type in a cohort of more than 3,000 dogs: Determining the optimal age to initiate cancer screening in canine patients Rafalko, Jill M. Kruglyak, Kristina M. McCleary-Wheeler, Angela L. Goyal, Vidit Phelps-Dunn, Ashley Wong, Lilian K. Warren, Chelsea D. Brandstetter, Gina Rosentel, Michelle C. DiMarzio, Lauren McLennan, Lisa M. O’Kell, Allison L. Cohen, Todd A. Grosu, Daniel S. Chibuk, Jason Tsui, Dana W. Y. Chorny, Ilya Flory, Andi PLoS One Research Article The goal of cancer screening is to detect disease at an early stage when treatment may be more effective. Cancer screening in dogs has relied upon annual physical examinations and routine laboratory tests, which are largely inadequate for detecting preclinical disease. With the introduction of non-invasive liquid biopsy cancer detection methods, the discussion is shifting from how to screen dogs for cancer to when to screen dogs for cancer. To address this question, we analyzed data from 3,452 cancer-diagnosed dogs to determine the age at which dogs of certain breeds and weights are typically diagnosed with cancer. In our study population, the median age at cancer diagnosis was 8.8 years, with males diagnosed at younger ages than females, and neutered dogs diagnosed at significantly later ages than intact dogs. Overall, weight was inversely correlated with age at cancer diagnosis, and purebred dogs were diagnosed at significantly younger ages than mixed-breed dogs. For breeds represented by ≥10 dogs, a breed-based median age at diagnosis was calculated. A weight-based linear regression model was developed to predict the median age at diagnosis for breeds represented by ≤10 dogs and for mixed-breed dogs. Our findings, combined with findings from previous studies which established a long duration of the preclinical phase of cancer development in dogs, suggest that it might be reasonable to consider annual cancer screening starting 2 years prior to the median age at cancer diagnosis for dogs of similar breed or weight. This logic would support a general recommendation to start cancer screening for all dogs at the age of 7, and as early as age 4 for breeds with a lower median age at cancer diagnosis, in order to increase the likelihood of early detection and treatment. Public Library of Science 2023-02-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9891508/ /pubmed/36724177 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0280795 Text en © 2023 Rafalko et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rafalko, Jill M.
Kruglyak, Kristina M.
McCleary-Wheeler, Angela L.
Goyal, Vidit
Phelps-Dunn, Ashley
Wong, Lilian K.
Warren, Chelsea D.
Brandstetter, Gina
Rosentel, Michelle C.
DiMarzio, Lauren
McLennan, Lisa M.
O’Kell, Allison L.
Cohen, Todd A.
Grosu, Daniel S.
Chibuk, Jason
Tsui, Dana W. Y.
Chorny, Ilya
Flory, Andi
Age at cancer diagnosis by breed, weight, sex, and cancer type in a cohort of more than 3,000 dogs: Determining the optimal age to initiate cancer screening in canine patients
title Age at cancer diagnosis by breed, weight, sex, and cancer type in a cohort of more than 3,000 dogs: Determining the optimal age to initiate cancer screening in canine patients
title_full Age at cancer diagnosis by breed, weight, sex, and cancer type in a cohort of more than 3,000 dogs: Determining the optimal age to initiate cancer screening in canine patients
title_fullStr Age at cancer diagnosis by breed, weight, sex, and cancer type in a cohort of more than 3,000 dogs: Determining the optimal age to initiate cancer screening in canine patients
title_full_unstemmed Age at cancer diagnosis by breed, weight, sex, and cancer type in a cohort of more than 3,000 dogs: Determining the optimal age to initiate cancer screening in canine patients
title_short Age at cancer diagnosis by breed, weight, sex, and cancer type in a cohort of more than 3,000 dogs: Determining the optimal age to initiate cancer screening in canine patients
title_sort age at cancer diagnosis by breed, weight, sex, and cancer type in a cohort of more than 3,000 dogs: determining the optimal age to initiate cancer screening in canine patients
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9891508/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36724177
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0280795
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