Abstract

BackgroundDespite 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 in dogs with OS without macroscopic metastases. We prospectively enrolled dogs with OS that received no cancer-specific treatment (n = 12) and control dogs without cancer (n = 2). Dogs were necropsied and sampled immediately after euthanasia. The OS dogs were classified as having macroscopic metastases (n = 2) or not (n = 10). We immunohistochemically stained one tissue sample from each of the seven lung lobes from each dog with a monoclonal antibody (TP-3) to identify micrometastases (defined as clusters of 5–50 tumour cells), microscopic metastases (> 50 tumour cells) and TP-3 positive single cells (< 5 tumour cells).ResultsWe showed that pulmonary micrometastases easily overseen on routine histology could be detected with TP-3. Pulmonary micrometastases and microscopic metastases were present in two dogs with OS without macroscopic metastases (20%). Micrometastases were visualised in three (43%) and four (57%) of seven samples from these two dogs, with a mean of 0.6 and 1.7 micrometastases per sample. Microscopic metastases were present in one (14%) and four (57%) of seven samples from the same two dogs, with a mean of 0.14 and 1.0 microscopic metastases per sample. There were four (57%) and two (29%) samples with neither microscopic metastases nor micrometastases for each of these two dogs. The prevalence of pulmonary micrometastases (20%) was significantly lower than expected (> 90%) based on commonly expected metastatic rates after amputation (P < 0.0001). There was no statistically significant difference in the number of TP-3 positive single cells in between groups (P = 0.85).ConclusionsPulmonary micrometastases could be detected with TP-3 immunohistochemistry in a subset of dogs with OS before macroscopic metastases had developed. We propose that dogs with spontaneous OS represent clinically relevant models to study early micrometastatic disease.

Highlights

  • Despite decades of research, the early phases of metastatic development are still not fully understood

  • The only significant pathological changes in the lungs were the macroscopic metastases seen in the two OS + /Met + dogs (Fig. 1a) and microscopic metastases (Fig. 1b) and suspected micrometastases (Fig. 1c) in some of the OS + /Met- dogs

  • We found that pulmonary metastases, microscopic metastases and micrometastases bind TP-3

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Summary

Introduction

The early phases of metastatic development are still not fully understood. 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 in dogs with OS without macroscopic metastases. Micrometastases have been studied in some spontaneous canine cancer forms [8,9,10,11,12] Their presence in lymph nodes, peripheral blood and bone marrow has been investigated in dogs with mammary carcinoma, as well as in lymph nodes of dogs with some other carcinomas and mast cell tumours. Micrometastases have been studied in lymph nodes, bone marrow, lungs, liver, pleural or peritoneal cavities and peripheral blood in several forms of cancer [13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22]

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