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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Surgical margin sizes for removing skin mast cell tumors in dogs

By Selmic, Laura E & Ruple, Audrey·Published in BMC veterinary research·2020·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A systematic review of surgical margins utilized for removal of cutaneous mast cell tumors in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A dog with a skin tumor called a mast cell tumor (MCT) was treated with surgery to remove it. Traditionally, vets recommended removing the tumor with a wide margin of 3 centimeters, but recent findings suggest that a 2-centimeter margin may also be effective. The studies reviewed showed that both 2 cm and 3 cm margins had low rates of leaving behind tumor cells or having the tumor come back. This means that for certain types of MCTs, a smaller margin can still lead to successful outcomes.

People also search for: dog mast cell tumor treatment · dog skin tumor surgery · mast cell tumor recurrence in dogs

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Traditionally, wide lateral surgical margins of 3&#x2009;cm and one fascial plane deep have been recommended for resection of canine cutaneous mast cell tumor (MCT). Several studies have been published assessing surgical margins of less than this traditional recommendation. The objective of this systematic review was to determine if resection MCT with lateral surgical margins <&#x2009;3&#x2009;cm results in low rates of incomplete resection and local tumor recurrence. Systematic searches of digital bibliographic databases were performed with two authors (AR & LES) screening abstracts to identify relevant scientific articles. Studies regarding surgical treatment of dogs with cutaneous MCT were reviewed. Data abstraction was performed and the quality of individual studies and the strength of the body of evidence for utilization of surgical margins <&#x2009;3&#x2009;cm for removal of MCTs was assessed. RESULTS: From the initial 78 citations identified through the database searches, four articles were retained for data abstraction after both relevance screenings were performed. Two studies were retrospective observational studies, one was a prospective case series and one was a prospective clinical trial. Assessment of the quality level of the body of evidence identified using the GRADE system was low. Excision of MCT at 2&#x2009;cm and 3&#x2009;cm was associated with comparably low rates of incomplete excision and recurrence. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the low quality of the overall body of evidence, a recommendation can be made that resection of canine cutaneous MCTs (<&#x2009;4&#x2009;cm) of Patnaik grade I and II with 2&#x2009;cm lateral margins and 1 fascial plane deep results in low rates of incomplete excision and local tumor recurrence.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31906934/