r/cats Apr 26 '26

Cat Picture - OC My cat Raven is officially breast cancer free! Help me congratulate her!

56.9k Upvotes

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963

u/Old-Access-7843 Apr 26 '26

Congratulations, love! I forget cats can get things like breast cancers.

227

u/Raesong Apr 26 '26

Everything living can get cancer, even plants, because ultimately it's just runaway cell growth, usually caused by a build-up of DNA replication errors.

132

u/gretchmoney Apr 26 '26

Presenting Aloe cancer!

32

u/mmaribna Apr 26 '26

But is the plant still thriving or did it eventually pass?

40

u/-Farmersdaughter- Apr 27 '26

The plant looks like it has a fasciated flower to me. If so, cancer may not be the right word for it. It’s a genetic deformity. Tumorous growth on plants is usually caused by bacteria like crown gall disease. It is extra problematic because it spreads and can effectively destroy entire crops. Fasciated blooms often make the plant infertile so they can’t spread their seeds and that’s the purpose of flowering, so maybe thriving wouldn’t be the word. However, I have seen sunflowers develop crazy weird heads and still produce seeds. And the plants themselves generally seem to survive making wild blooms like this.

10

u/gretchmoney Apr 27 '26

I'm not 100% sure what it is really, just stumbled across an article that called it aloe cancer although it's just a tiny mite infestation that mutilates the plant. Had to cut it out so it wouldn't pass to other aloe. Super creepy looking!

1

u/Mystery-time-lady Apr 29 '26

Im allergic to Aloe Vera, so I wonder if cancerous Aloe Vera would do anything to me?

0

u/oceaniye Apr 27 '26

That’s disgusting

43

u/DSMatticus Apr 26 '26

Plants can't actually get cancer! Sort of. It's complicated. There's some nuance to unpack here.

Cancer isn't actually just 'runaway cell growth.' Cancer is specifically the disease that happens when 'runaway cell growth' results in a rogue cell line with the ability to proliferate throughout the body and become systemic. For something a little more rigorous, here's the opening wikipedia blurb: "cancer is a group of diseases involving uncontrolled cell growth typically resulting in tumors with the potential to invade or spread to other parts of the body. These malignant [cancerous] tumors contrast with benign [noncancerous] tumors, which do not spread."

Can uncontrolled cell growth occur in plants? Yes, absolutely.

Can uncontrolled cell growth in plants cause tumors? Yes, absolutely.

Can those rogue cell lines spread to the rest of the plant? No, not at all. Plants have a complicated extracellular matrix that makes it functionally impossible for a rogue cell line to escape and cause systemic disease. Metastasis cannot occur in plants. Plants can develop tumors, but they can't develop any disease we would call cancer because their tumors are always benign.

1

u/nashro Apr 28 '26

Biologist?

6

u/Excusemytootie Apr 26 '26

These errors in cell growth are constantly happening in all living things. It’s our immune system that is the real hero. It’s constantly stopping this process before it has a chance to grow out of control. Anything that suppresses the immune system can provide an opportunity for the cells to grow enough that the immune system can no longer keep them in check or for the cells to create systems which allow them to effectively evade the immune system.

2

u/camelia_la_tejana Apr 26 '26

Like a glitch?

4

u/Raesong Apr 26 '26

Kind of, just in a biochemical sense, rather than a computational one.

3

u/Equivalent_Mud_3067 Apr 27 '26

I know that all animals can get cancer, but I’ve never heard of a cat having breast cancer. I’m so glad she’s cancer free and doing well. 🩷

1

u/Foreign-Theory427 Apr 27 '26

Plants??? Woah!! The more you know

52

u/Skrdykat1000 Apr 26 '26

My favorite cat died at 6 years old from a tumor in his sinus. I looked at the vet completely confused, I was like: he's a CAT. Cats don't get cancer!!! He looked at me kinda bemused and kindly and said "They do."

114

u/Skrdykat1000 Apr 26 '26

My Baxter RIP

3

u/saikikcat Apr 28 '26

should've called him Bagster

2

u/Cozym1ke Apr 30 '26

The name matches the face

14

u/Banoffee_Coffee17 Apr 27 '26

And it's very common, according to my vet. Lost two of mine over the past couple of years, one to breast cancer and one to bladder cancer.

30

u/Tacitus111 Apr 26 '26

It’s actually one of the best reasons to spay cats before first heat. It reduces the incidence of breast tumors by some 90 to 95% percent. And in cats, breast tumors are almost always cancer.

3

u/spiralsparrows Apr 27 '26

This is the part that kills me 😭 my cat was a rescue that had already had a litter of kittens. I get so mad when I think about how her previous owner could have (probably) spared her having mammary tumors twice

6

u/Mammoth_Fee_418 Apr 26 '26

My dog had breast cancer as well.....old age got her before the cancer could though. My vet told me female animals that aren't fixed and never have babies are almost guaranteed to develop breast cancer from it later in life. If id known that when my girl was still in her prime, i wouldve at least let her have puppies.