The Canadian Press - ONLINE EDITION
Thousands of golden retrievers sought for lifetime study aimed at understanding dog cancer
LOS ANGELES, Calif. - When Jay Mesinger heard about a study seeking golden retrievers to help fight canine cancer, he immediately signed up 2-year-old Louie.
He and his wife know firsthand the toll of canine cancer: Louie is their fourth golden retriever. The first three died of cancer.
"They all had long lives but were taken by complications from one kind of cancer or another," said the businessman from Boulder, Colo.
For Louie and 2,999 other purebred goldens, it will be the study of a lifetime. Their lives — usually a 10-to-14-year span — will be tracked for genetic, nutritional and environmental risks to help scientists and veterinarians find ways to prevent canine cancer, widely considered the No. 1 cause of death in older dogs, said Dr. Rodney Page.
The Golden Retriever Lifetime Study will be the largest and longest dog study ever conducted, said Page, the study's principal investigator, a professor of veterinary oncology and the director of the Flint Animal Cancer Center at Colorado State University.
The study will focus on three cancers that can be fatal to the dogs, including bone cancer, lymphoma (cancer of the lymph nodes) and a cancer in the blood vessels called hemangiosarcoma, Page said. He also expects the data to yield information about other dog diseases, like arthritis, hip dysplasia, hormonal and skin disorders and epilepsy, he said.
The Morris Animal Foundation, a 64-year-old group based in Denver, is providing much of the $25 million needed for the study. The rest will be funded through online public donations that allow people to sponsor one of the 3,000 canine volunteers.
The study is recruiting purebred golden retrievers under the age of 2 whose pedigree can be traced back at least three generations. The breed was chosen because "they are very common. They are the fourth- or fifth-most common dog recognized by the American Kennel Club. They are wonderful companions for people and found in every walk of human endeavour," Page said.
Researchers were seeking young dogs because "knowing the history of their lives provides huge advantages," Page said. Those involved in the study compared the work to the Framingham Heart Study, which has tracked a group of humans and their descendants from Framingham, Mass., since 1948.
Dr. Nancy Bureau, Mesinger's veterinarian at the Alpine Animal Hospital in Boulder, said that given the condensed lifespan of a dog, it might not take a decade to see results from the study.
"Before this group of volunteer dogs has left this world, hopefully we will have data to help even them," she said.
A pilot study of 50 dogs started in August 2012, and Page said preliminary results from that first group should be ready soon and reportable results could be possible in a year.
Work on the study started about four years ago. After funding was approved, scientific and research teams were formed, the database was set up, a bio-lab found to store the samples and a questionnaire was written.
The recruitment of volunteer dogs was expected to be done in two years, with most of it spent on verifying eligibility and participation. Page said it takes about four weeks to verify pedigree and health, and make sure a dog's owner and veterinarian will participate. So far, 200 dogs have accepted the invitation, and 600 others are on a waiting list.
Bureau, who also has a golden retriever client on the waiting list, said it's a privilege to be part of a groundbreaking study. Aside from researchers, participating veterinarians probably have the most work — they have to submit samples of blood, urine and hair during annual exams and report whenever they treat a volunteer dog for any reason.
Study leaders will not intervene or recommend any treatment, Page said. "We will work with the vets working with the pets. We will catalogue all the things that happen, the medical history, the diet, environment and exposures."
The vets hope the study eventually will benefit humans. Researchers will pay particular attention to early onset obesity in dogs to see how it is related to diabetes, Page said.
Dog-years are a benefit to researching ailments found in both dogs and humans, because studying a dog for 10 years is akin to studying a human for 60 or 70 years, said Dr. Wayne Jensen, the Morris Animal Foundation's chief scientific officer and executive director.
"There are many examples where risk factors in dogs have also been found in people," said Jensen.
The study will also try to measure factors in a dog's life, such as how fun and an owner's love affect the animal's health and longevity. That will be attempted through questions about the number of children or other pets in the owner's family, the amount of time spent together — and the dog's sleeping spot.
Mesinger knows the answer to that one off the top of his head: "In bed, with my wife and I."
___
Online:
http://www.CanineLifetimeHealth.org
http://www.csuanimalcancercenter.org
http://www.morrisanimalfoundation.org
More Featured
- Back to Top
- Return to Featured
More Featured
(1 of 50 articles for this year)
Route 66 motel in New Mexico where Bill Gates worked on early Microsoft being redeveloped
04/18/2013 5:18 PM 0Poll
Most Popular Featured
- Massage parlours rub therapists wrong way
- Rents hit the roof
- Province steps up for refugees
- Big changes coming to youth soccer in Winnipeg
- Foster mom made all the difference for a scared girl who hopes to help others
- Spy-cam in women's change room
- By producing more movies and picking projects carefully, Brad Pitt is 'Killing Them Softly'
- Danone to settle lawsuit over Activia yogurt, DanActive health claims
- Smithsonian to make rare loan of Dorothy's ruby slippers from 'Oz' to London museum
- Music Review: LeAnn Rimes puts it all together on aptly named new album 'Spitfire'
- Massage parlours rub therapists wrong way
- Rents hit the roof
- Windows 8 to launch on array of inventive devices
- Red light? Green light?
- Spy-cam in women's change room
- Fries or hash browns? McDonald's rolling out 'After Midnight' menu
- Review: Kindle Fire looks nice, but $199 price comes with sacrifice
- Alberta dinosaur museum finds rare fossil of prehistoric marine reptile
- U.K. teen Conor Maynard compared to Justin Bieber, praised by top R&B stars
- Province steps up for refugees
- Massage parlours rub therapists wrong way
- Rents hit the roof
- Risk of 'suicide contagion' for teens after schoolmate's dies by own hand: study
- VLT revenues fuel economic development on Swan Lake First Nation
- Red light? Green light?
- Red River College's culinary institute open for classes
- Home-product developers try to lower the volume in a noisy world
- Winnipegger convicted of importing coral rock, sea horses
- Manitoba feeling the squeeze
- Architects optimize every nook and cranny when designing micro houses
Ads by Google












You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is be a Winnipeg Free Press print or e-edition subscriber to join the conversation and give your feedback.
You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is be a Winnipeg Free Press print or e-edition subscriber to join the conversation and give your feedback.
Have Your Say
New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
Have Your Say
Comments are open to Winnipeg Free Press print or e-edition subscribers only. why?
Login SubscribeHave Your Say
Comments are open to Winnipeg Free Press Subscribers only. why?
SubscribeThe Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010.