Andrigo Barboza De Nardi*, Talita Mariana Morata
Raposo1, Rafael Ricardo Huppes1, Carlos
Roberto Daleck2 and Renée Laufer Amorim3
Small Animal Veterinary Medicine, Universidade de
Franca-UNIFRAN & School of Veterinary Medicine, Universidade Federal
do Tocantins-UFT; 1Veterinary Medicine Graduate Program,
Universidade Estadual Paulista- UNESP, Campus in Jaboticabal; 2Veterinary
Surgery Graduate Program, Universidade Estadual Paulista-UNESP,
Campus at Jaboticabal;3Veterinary Medicine
Graduate Program, Universidade Estadual Paulista-UNESP, Campus at
Botucatu and Veterinary Medicine Graduate Program, Universidade
Estadual Paulista- UNESP, Campus in Jaboticabal, Brazil *Corresponding author:
andrigobarboza@yahoo.com.br
Abstract
Cancer is one of the main causes of death in
canines and felines, and this fact is probably related to the increase in the
longevity of these species.The longer the animals live, the higher the exposure to
carcinogenic agents will be.With the high incidence of cancer in companion animals,
new studies are currently being performed with the aim of finding therapeutic
options which make the complete inhibition of the development of neoplasms in
animals possible in the future.The correlation of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) whith the
development of cancer opens the way for the use of new therapeutic approaches. This relationship has
been suggested based on various studies which established an association between
the chronic use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) and a decrease in the
incidence of colon carcinoma.As cancer progresses, COX-2 participates in the
arachidonic acid metabolism by synthesizing prostaglandins which can mediate
various mechanisms related to cancer development such as:increase in
angiogenesis, inhibition of apoptosis, suppression of the immune response,
acquisition of greater invasion capacity and metastasis.Accordingly,
overexpression of this enzyme in tumors has been associated with the most
aggressive, poor-prognosis cancer types, especially carcinomas.Therefore, treatments
which use COX-2 inhibitors such as coxibs, whether administered as single agents
or in combination with conventional antineoplastic chemotherapy, are an
alternative for extending the survival of our cancer patients.