Incidence and Heritability of Gastric Carcinoma in the Belgian Shepherd Dog Population in The Netherlands

Publication date

2025-01-04

Authors

Hugen, SanneISNI 0000000492481453
Limpens, CitlalliISNI 0000000524045534
Robben, Joris HISNI 000000038776526X
Fieten, HilleISNI 0000000419428066
Mandigers, P.J.J.ORCID 0000-0003-2547-6673ISNI 0000000393089835

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc

Abstract

Background: Gastric carcinoma in the Tervueren and Groenendael varieties of the Belgian Shepherd dog is commonly recognized and carries a grave prognosis. Information on incidence and heritability is necessary to design an effective selection strategy against this disease. Methods: A database of cases and controls was built including cases with Tier 1 (confirmed via endoscopy or post-mortem) and Tier 2 evidence of gastric carcinoma. From the database, a birth cohort of dogs born in the Netherlands in the period 2000–2010 was used, together with pedigree information to calculate heritability using a mixed models approach. Univariate linear regression was used to test the influence of the gastric carcinoma status of the parents on gastric carcinoma occurrence in offspring. Results: For Tervueren the 10-year cumulative incidence was 4.7%, and for the Groenendael this was 2.1%. There was no sex predilection. The odds of gastric carcinoma were 5.0 (2.4–11.0) in offspring where at least one parent was known to be affected versus at least one parent was known to be unaffected. Heritability, based on analysis using pedigree information from 338 dogs with gastric carcinoma and 159 controls, was 0.53 (SE 0.15). Conclusions: Gastric carcinoma in the Belgian Shepherd Tervueren and Groenendael varieties has a high incidence in the Dutch population and a strong genetic component. Because it is a late onset disease, dogs have often already been used for breeding before they are diagnosed. An effective breeding strategy for reducing disease incidence therefore relies on the identification of genetic risk factors influencing its development.

Keywords

Belgian sheepdog, groenendael, population genetics, stomach cancer, tervueren, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Hugen, S, Limpens, C, Robben, J H, Fieten, H & Mandigers, P J J 2025, 'Incidence and Heritability of Gastric Carcinoma in the Belgian Shepherd Dog Population in The Netherlands', Veterinary Sciences, vol. 12, no. 1, 18. https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci12010018