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Precision One Health Initiative

Improving Health for Man & Man's Best Friend

Researchers at the University of Georgia College of Veterinary Medicine have become the first to publish canine bladder cancer organoid data on the NCI’s Integrated Data Commons.

Organoids are 3D miniature versions of an organ grown in culture, enabling researchers to test various treatments for efficacy and toxicity before ever using the drug in a patient.

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UGA’s Precision One Health Initiative Improves Animal and Human Health by Developing Alternative Models of Disease

by Sharron Quisenberry, PhD; Karin Allenspach-Jorn, PhD; Jonathan Mochel, DVM, PhD; Lisa K. Nolan, DVM, PhD; Amy H Carter, AB

Originally published in the American Journal of Veterinary Research


Researchers at the University of Georgia College of Veterinary Medicine have become the first to publish canine bladder cancer organoid data on the NCI’s Integrated Data Commons.  The team led by Drs. Jonathan P. Mochel and Karin Allenspach-Jorn is part of UGA’s Precision One Health Initiative (POHI), which studies the connections between genetics, the environment, and lifestyle factors, and their effects on animal and human health. This research aims to develop personalized medicine, using customized diagnostics and preventive or therapeutic regimens based on molecular profiling.

“When we talk about One Health, people often immediately think of infectious diseases, especially those that can transfer between animals and humans,” said Dr. Mochel.  However, the lab takes a different approach by studying diseases that affect both animals and humans, an area that has been somehow overlooked until now, particularly in the context of cardiovascular diseases, or even cancer.  By leveraging naturally occurring canine models of diseases commonly found in humans – such as cancer, cardiorenal and metabolic diseases, or inflammatory bowel disease, researchers can build a database of various disease presentations and test potential therapies in a preclinical setting before moving on to human clinical trials.

a woman wearing a white coat and gloves uses a piece of lab equipment
Karin Allenspach Jorn in Laboratory (Dorothy Kozlowski/UGA)

The POHI researchers have developed organoids for canine bladder cancer, a cancer that also occurs in humans. Organoids are 3D miniature versions of an organ grown in culture, enabling researchers to test various treatments for efficacy and toxicity before ever using the drug in a patient.  The lab is working with muscle-invasive bladder cancer, an aggressive subtype that is relatively rare in people but very common in dogs. It is a cancer that has many similarities between dogs and people, and several centers recognize it as a good model of the human disease. However, “using this model is challenging because recruiting enough canine patients for clinical trials takes a long time,” Dr. Allenspach-Jorn said.

That is where organoids come in. With organoids developed from canine tumor tissues, the efficacy of treatments can be assessed more quickly and taken to human and canine trials faster.

In addition, the development and archiving of organoids, done in partnership with NIH, allows researchers to test drug therapies specific to many different iterations of a single disease.  According to Allenspach-Jorn some of the tumors in human and veterinary medicine are quite different from one patient to the next, thus having a range of organoids from various patients with the same disease is greatly beneficial when evaluating potential treatments.

a young man with labrador dog outdoors. Man on a green grass with dog.
Each year, over 83,000 people in the U.S. are diagnosed with bladder cancer, according to the American Cancer Society.

Detail of a microplate and computer image of cells in the SMART Translational Medicine Lab. (Dorothy Kozlowski/UGA)

Precision One Health is stepping away from the “one size fits all” approach of treating tumors with every available therapy.  Knowing that a specific treatment will work with a certain type of tumor will allow clinicians to tailor therapy to the individual patient, hence the term “precision medicine”. Drs. Mochel and Allenspach, both veterinarians, revel in the fact that the knowledge gleaned from such studies can be used to help dogs and people.

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