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Comparative review of human and canine osteosarcoma: morphology,epidemiology, prognosis,treatment and genetics
Authors:Siobhan Simpson  Mark David Dunning  Simone de Brot  Llorenç Grau-Roma  Nigel Patrick Mongan  " target="_blank">Catrin Sian Rutland
Institution:1.Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine and Science,The University of Nottingham, Sutton Bonington Campus,Loughborough,UK;2.Department of Pharmacology,Weill Cornell Medicine,New York,USA
Abstract:Osteosarcoma (OSA) is a rare cancer in people. However OSA incidence rates in dogs are 27 times higher than in people. Prognosis in both species is relatively poor, with 5 year OSA survival rates in people not having improved in decades. For dogs, 1 year survival rates are only around ~ 45%. Improved and novel treatment regimens are urgently required to improve survival in both humans and dogs with OSA. Utilising information from genetic studies could assist in this in both species, with the higher incidence rates in dogs contributing to the dog population being a good model of human disease. This review compares the clinical characteristics, gross morphology and histopathology, aetiology, epidemiology, and genetics of canine and human OSA. Finally, the current position of canine OSA genetic research is discussed and areas for additional work within the canine population are identified.
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