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A Malignant Disease of Pike
by
Maire F. Mulcahy, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Zoology, Department
of Zoology, University College, Cork, Ireland.
Lymphoma, a malignant cancer, occurs in the pike Esox lucius L.
in Ireland. We have been investigating many aspects of the disease in our Department over the past twenty years.
This disease is an obvious and rather repulsive condition, as it manifests
itself as soft cream-to-red growths, often massive, usually on the jaws
but often on the flanks, fins or other parts of the body. In the earlier
stages of the disease the tumours do not seem to inhibit the fish greatly,
but as the growths progress and spread the fish become emaciated, and often
cannot feed because of tumours and loss of teeth on the jaws, and often
cannot breathe properly because of interference by tumour's on the
gills or under the gill cover.
By histopathology the disease is defined
as a malignant lymphoma and under a microscope is remarkably similar to lymphomas/leukaemias
found in man and higher chordates. It is therefore of interest not only as
.a disease which can kill the pike but it is also of great significance as
an animal model of human disease which may be studied in its spontaneous form
in feral populations.
The disease is remarkable in that it occurs as epizootics or outbreaks
when as many as one in eight fish may be affected. Just as unpredictably
as an epizootic occurs it can disappear again within a year or two.
In Ireland, up to recently, the pike
was regarded as a pest and every effort was being made to eradicate it. This
is because the pike is a predator on salmon and trout and was making inroads
into salmonids stocks of lakes and rivers. For almost 30 years pike were systematically
removed by all feasible means: nets, traps, long-lines, rotenone etc. Policy
has changed considerably recently, but the eradication period provided
a unique opportunity for us to obtain data on pike populations and
on the incidence of lymphoma. It also made it possible for us to obtain
live diseased fish for experimental investigation.
The disease has been found in pike in
all major fishery areas in Ireland at some time or another in the past twenty
years. Male and female pike seem equally susceptible, and while pike from
1+ age have been affected, 4 years seems to be the age of greatest susceptibility.
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Experimentally, we have been able to
pass the lymphoma from diseased to healthy pike by cell transplants: live
cells taken from a tumour, formed into a suspension in saline, when injected
into healthy pike, will grow at the site of injection in one-third of cases.
More significantly, cell-free filtrates of tumour: tumour homogenised and
filtered so as to exclude whole cells and bacteria, when injected into
healthy pike induce the lymphoma. These cell-free transmission experiments
have provided strong evidence that the lymphoma may be caused by a virus.
We have had great help and assistance
from anglers in Ireland in our investigations. But almost invariably anglers
worry about handling pike with the tumours least they should be infected
themselves. By way of reassurance it is worth mentioning that there is no
evidence at all that the disease can pass from fish to man. In further support
of this we have tried inducing the disease in a variety of other animals,
including goldfish, frogs, toads and mice, with no success.
One of the most intriguing aspects of
pike lymphoma is its world-wide distribution. The disease is known in Ireland,
in Northern Europe, particularly in the Baltic Sea, and in North America
and in Canada, where its larger relation, the muskellunge Esox masquinongy
also may show the disease. However, there is not a single validated report,
formal or informal, of the lymphoma from England, Scotland or Wales.
Through this magazine about two years ago attention was drawn to this fact
and quite a number of anglers kindly responded with reports, some of
them accompanied by photographs, of growths in pike. One cannot diagnose
the disease with certainty without histopathology, and I am very grateful
to Neville Fielding who undertook considerable trouble to obtain a specimen
of tumour from a pike which was regularly caught in a local gravel pit.
This tumour when examined has indeed proved to be a malignant cancer, but
it is a carcinoma and not in fact a lymphoma.
Thinking that perhaps pike in the U.K.
might be a different genetic strain to those elsewhere in the range of the
pike we carried out, over a number of years, an extensive genetic study of
pike populations. We did a detailed protein (isoenzyme) analysis of pike populations
from seven different regions of the world. The outcome of this
was that there was no evidence at all for a genetic explanation for the absence
of the disease. The pike populations proved to be very uniform.
My own personal feeling is that the disease probably does exist in waters
in England but has merely not been reported.
This article first appeared in Pikelines 20 (December
1982) - on this website 25/06/06
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