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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with spinal nephroblastoma lived 11 years after surgery

By Nakaichi, Munekazu et al.·Published in Open veterinary journal·2022·Department of Veterinary Radiology, Japan·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A long survival case of spinal nephroblastoma in a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 5-year-old female dog was brought to the vet because she was experiencing progressive paralysis in her hind legs. After imaging tests, she was diagnosed with a rare spinal tumor called nephroblastoma. The vet performed surgery to remove the tumor and followed up with radiation therapy. Remarkably, the dog recovered well and was able to walk normally again. She lived for another 11 years without any signs of tumor recurrence, passing away from aspiration pneumonia unrelated to her previous condition.

People also search for: dog hindlimb paralysis treatment · spinal tumor surgery in dogs · nephroblastoma in dogs survival rate

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Dogs' nephroblastoma of the spinal cord is a rare neoplastic disease, with few reports of long-term survival after surgery. We experienced that surgical treatment with postoperative radiation therapy for spinal nephroblastoma in a dog resulted in the long-term survival of 11 years. CASE DESCRIPTION: The patient presented to our veterinary hospital because of progressive hindlimb paralysis. Based on diagnostic imaging, she was diagnosed with a thoracolumbar spinal cord tumor and was treated with surgery. The gross tumor tissue was removed after laminectomy, followed by postoperative radiation therapy using orthovoltage equipment. The histopathological features of the surgical specimen were consistent with those of previously reported spinal nephroblastoma, although infrequent mitotic figures were observed. The dog recovered well after treatment and resumed her normal walking condition. No tumor recurrence was observed on periodic follow-up magnetic resonance imaging performed 10 and 21 months after surgery. Imaging evaluation for the gradual development of hindlimb weakness was performed 9 years after surgery; however, no recurrence of tumor tissue was observed, and spondylosis deformans, probably induced after laminectomy, were identified as a possible cause. The dog died of aspiration pneumonia 11 years after surgery, independent of spinal nephroblastoma. CONCLUSION: To date, no clinical cases of canine spinal cord primary nephroblastoma that survived for 11 years after surgery have been reported. This case strongly suggests that providing intensive treatment for canine spinal nephroblastoma is very important.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35603077/