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Comparison of age, sex, and incidence rates in human and canine breast cancer

Robert Schneider
- 01 Aug 1970 - 
- Vol. 26, Iss: 2, pp 419-426
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TLDR
Compared on age distribution, crude and age‐adjusted incidence rates, and agespecific incidence rate pattern, important similarities and differences between species that may affect breast cancer risk are discussed in the context of the natural history of human breast cancer.
Abstract
A 5-year collection of cases of human breast cancer in males and females from the Alameda County Tumor Registry and a 5-year collection of canine cases from the Alameda-Contra Costa Counties Animal Neoplasm Registry were compared on age distribution, crude and age-adjusted incidence rates, and agespecific incidence rate pattern. To facilitate comparisons, ages of dogs were converted to human equivalents. The median ages and overall proportional distribution by age were in close agreement for the 2 sexes of both species. When canine and human incidence were adjusted to the same population distribution, canine age-adjusted incidence rates were 3 times larger in females and 16 times larger in males. Female age-specific rates increased at the same magnitude for both species until the start of the ages of natural menopause in women; then the human rates continued to increase, but slowly, while the canine rates continued to increase at approximately the same exponential value as in the younger age groups. Important similarities and differences between species that may affect breast cancer risk are discussed in the context of the natural history of human breast cancer.

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Book ChapterDOI

Tumors of the Mammary Gland

W. Misdorp
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Canine Mammary Epithelial Neoplasms: Biologic Implications of Morphologic Characteristics Assessed in 232 Dogs:

TL;DR: In this study, the biologic behavior of mammary lesions was assessed according to the frequency of development of de novo or recurrent invasive carcinoma within two years and structural variables found to be prognostically significant in human mammary neoplasms were recognized.
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Incidence of and survival after mammary tumors in a population of over 80,000 insured female dogs in Sweden from 1995 to 2002.

TL;DR: The main objective of this study was to describe the incidence of mammary tumors and the survival after MTs, in female dogs between 3 and 10 years of age (insured for veterinary care and with life insurance in a Swedish animal-insurance company) from 1995 to 2002.
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Classification and Behavior of Canine Mammary Epithelial Neoplasms Based on Life-span Observations in Beagles

TL;DR: A histogenetically based reclassification of epithelial mammary tumors is proposed, emphasizing the importance of not lumping these tumors under the classification of malignant mixed tumors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative review of human and canine osteosarcoma: morphology, epidemiology, prognosis, treatment and genetics

TL;DR: Improved and novel treatment regimens are urgently required to improve survival in both humans and dogs with OSA, with the higher incidence rates in dogs contributing to the dog population being a good model of human disease.
References
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Journal Article

Development of mammary tumors from hyperplastic alveolar nodules transplanted into gland-free mammary fat pads of female C3H mice.

TL;DR: This report presents three series of exper iments which fulfill the essential exper imenta l condit ions and which provide the desired direct evidence, and a new t r ansp lan ta t ion technic is described, which permi t s the t rAnsp lanTa t ion of normal, nodular, and tumorous m a m m a r y tissues into host m a n f rom hosts' fa t pads.
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Oncogenes of rna tumor viruses as determinants of cancer

TL;DR: An understanding of how normal cells and normal animals prevent expression of endogenous viral information would appear to offer one of the best hopes for the control of naturally occurring cancers.
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