2021
DOI: 10.1186/s13028-021-00608-9
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Early immunohistochemical detection of pulmonary micrometastases in dogs with osteosarcoma

Abstract: Background Despite decades of research, the early phases of metastatic development are still not fully understood. Canine osteosarcoma (OS) is a highly aggressive cancer, with a high metastatic rate (> 90%), despite a low overt metastatic prevalence at initial diagnosis (< 15%). Canine OS is generally regarded as a good clinically relevant model for human OS. The aim of this hypothesis-generating study was to evaluate a method to detect pulmonary micrometastases and study their prevalence… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…The high incidence of cancer and subsequent osteoblastic bone metastasis makes it particularly valuable as a research model for the development of novel antimetastatic drugs [57]. Additionally, Mikael et al concluded that canine osteosarcoma is generally considered a good clinically relevant model for human osteosarcoma, and in particular, dogs with idiopathic osteosarcoma are a clinically relevant model for studying early micrometastatic disease [58]. Knapp's research suggests that canine bladder cancer is a valuable addition to experimentally induced rodent models for the study of bladder cancer.…”
Section: In Vivo Models Of Metastatic Cancermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The high incidence of cancer and subsequent osteoblastic bone metastasis makes it particularly valuable as a research model for the development of novel antimetastatic drugs [57]. Additionally, Mikael et al concluded that canine osteosarcoma is generally considered a good clinically relevant model for human osteosarcoma, and in particular, dogs with idiopathic osteosarcoma are a clinically relevant model for studying early micrometastatic disease [58]. Knapp's research suggests that canine bladder cancer is a valuable addition to experimentally induced rodent models for the study of bladder cancer.…”
Section: In Vivo Models Of Metastatic Cancermentioning
confidence: 99%