Veterinary and comparative oncology | 2021

Risk of bladder cancer and lymphoma in dogs is associated with pollution indices by county of residence.

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Human urothelial carcinoma (UCC) and non-Hodgkin lymphoma are considered environmental cancers in people, but less is known about environment risk for UCC and lymphoma in dogs. The objective of this study was to determine whether dogs with these cancers, compared to unaffected control dogs, live in counties with higher tap water contaminants or higher levels of air pollution as measured by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and by National Air Toxics Assessment chemical exposure risk estimates. Dogs with available home addresses from two previously published case-control populations were included: 66 dogs with UCC and 70 unaffected controls; and 56 boxer dogs with lymphoma and 84 unaffected boxer controls. Tap water total trihalomethanes, which are water disinfection by-products, were more than 3-fold higher in UCC case counties of residence compared to controls (P <\u20090.0001), and a higher proportion of dogs with UCC lived in counties exceeding EPA ozone limits (41.8%) compared to controls (13.6% P\xa0=\xa00.0008). More boxers with lymphoma lived in counties exceeding EPA ozone limits (52.1%) compared to controls (29.0%; P\xa0=\xa00.018), with higher exposure risk estimates for airborne 1,3 butadiene and formaldehyde (P\xa0=\xa00.004-0.005). These data support the hypothesis that tap water contaminants and airborne environmental pollutants contribute to the risk of both urothelial carcinoma and lymphoma in dogs. If these findings reflect causal relationships, then it is possible that tap water filtration units and more effective air pollution controls could decrease the overall incidence of these cancers in dogs. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1111/vco.12771
Language English
Journal Veterinary and comparative oncology

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