Experimental and clinical data indicate that tumor progression is associated with angiogenesis and that an increase in
microvascular density (MVD) is associated with a poor prognosis, in both solid and hematological malignancies. No data
have been published concerning the relationship between angiogenesis and malignancy grade in canine non-Hodgkin’s
lymphoma (NHL), which is a neoplasm that shares several biological and clinical characteristics with human NHL. In the
present study, we evaluated this relationship in a series of 43 cases of canine NHL. The results demonstrate that both MVD
and endothelial area (EA) were significantly higher in high-grade compared to low-grade lymphoma and a good statistical
correlation was found between MVD and EA. These data indicate that increased angiogenesis paralleled with increased
malignancy grade in canine NHL, which represents an interesting tumor model for studying the role of angiogenesis as an
interspecies pathway of tumoral malignancy and biological aggressiveness
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