Seltenhammer M H, Simhofer H, Scherzer S, Zechner R, Curik I, Sölkner J, Brandt S M, Jansen B, Pehamberger H, Eisenmenger E
Department of Clinical Surgery and Ophthalmology, University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna, Austria.
Equine Vet J. 2003 Mar;35(2):153-7. doi: 10.2746/042516403776114234.
Equine melanomas occur most commonly in grey horses at age 5 years or more. Generally, benign and malignant melanomas are distinguished by microscopy, but a more distinct classification would be helpful.
The objectives of this study were to gain further evidence concerning the occurrence of melanotic tumours, and to evaluate the impact of heredity on melanoma development.
A clinical study was conducted on a defined population of 296 grey horses of Lipizzaner breed. Individuals were classified according to their stage of disease using a 0-5 scale. Heritability was estimated on a sample of 296 grey horses with pedigrees traced back as far as 32 generations.
Of the 296 horses, dermal melanomas were present in 148 horses (50%), 68 of which were more than age 15 years; 51 of these were melanoma-bearing. In 75.6% of cases, melanotic tumours were detected underneath the tail. Although melanoma-bearing grey horses were encountered up to stage 4, none of the affected individuals suffered any severe clinical effect or was handicapped in performance. Statistical analysis revealed highly significant effects of stud and age (P < 0.0001), explaining 28% of the total variability.
In contrast to melanomas in solid-coloured horses characterised by early metastases, melanomas in grey horses showed less malignancy. Affected individuals often had encapsulated nodules or structures similar to human blue nevi. Grey horse-specific genetic factors inhibiting metastatic processes may be responsible for this phenomenon.
Although the obtained heritability estimate of 0.36 with a standard error of 0.11 indicates a strong genetic impact on the development of melanoma in ageing grey horses, a possible influence of the genes with large effects was also suggested. Therefore, further analysis is required of melanoma development in the ageing grey horse.
马黑色素瘤最常见于5岁及以上的灰色马匹。一般来说,良性和恶性黑色素瘤通过显微镜检查来区分,但更明确的分类会有所帮助。
本研究的目的是获取有关黑素瘤性肿瘤发生的进一步证据,并评估遗传因素对黑色素瘤发展的影响。
对296匹利皮扎马品种的灰色马匹进行了一项临床研究。根据疾病阶段使用0至5级对个体进行分类。在296匹系谱可追溯至32代的灰色马匹样本中估计遗传力。
在296匹马中,148匹马(50%)存在皮肤黑色素瘤,其中68匹马年龄超过15岁;其中51匹马患有黑色素瘤。在75.6%的病例中,在尾巴下方检测到黑素瘤性肿瘤。尽管患有黑色素瘤的灰色马匹在4期之前都有出现,但没有一个受影响的个体出现任何严重的临床症状或表现受限。统计分析显示种马和年龄有极显著影响(P < 0.0001),解释了总变异性的28%。
与以早期转移为特征的纯色马黑色素瘤不同,灰色马的黑色素瘤恶性程度较低。受影响的个体通常有包膜结节或类似于人类蓝色痣的结构。抑制转移过程的灰色马特异性遗传因素可能是造成这种现象的原因。
尽管获得的遗传力估计值为0.36,标准误差为0.11,表明遗传因素对老龄灰色马黑色素瘤的发展有强烈影响,但也提示了可能存在具有较大效应的基因的影响。因此,需要对老龄灰色马的黑色素瘤发展进行进一步分析。