PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

German Shepherd dog with unusual chronic myeloid leukemia symptoms

By Marino, Christina L et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc·2017·Department of Clinical Studies, United States·View original on PubMed

PetCaseFinder translated the abstract of this peer-reviewed paper into plain English so pet owners can read it. We do not publish original research — every detail traces back to the citation above. How we work →

Original publication title: Atypical chronic myeloid leukemia in a German Shepherd Dog.

Species:
dog
LymphomaStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A 4-year-old neutered male German Shepherd was brought to the vet after showing signs of lethargy, restlessness, and vomiting for three days. The vet found swollen lymph nodes, pale gums, dehydration, and a fever. Blood tests showed a high white blood cell count, severe anemia, and low platelets, indicating a serious condition. Further tests revealed that the dog had atypical chronic myeloid leukemia, a rare blood cancer. Unfortunately, due to the severity of the disease and the extent of organ involvement, the decision was made to euthanize the dog.

People also search for: German Shepherd vomiting lethargy · dog leukemia symptoms · what to do for dog with pale gums

Abstract

A 4-y-old neutered male German Shepherd Dog was presented with a 3-d duration of lethargy, restlessness, and vomiting. Physical examination revealed generalized lymphadenopathy, pale mucous membranes, systolic heart murmur, dehydration, and fever. Hematologic abnormalities included moderate-to-marked leukocytosis, characterized by neutrophilia with a left shift to progranulocytes and 2% presumptive myeloid blasts, marked anemia that was nonregenerative, and marked thrombocytopenia. Dysplasia was evident in neutrophils and platelets. Bone marrow examination revealed marked myeloid and megakaryocytic hyperplasia with 7% blasts, erythroid hypoplasia, and trilineage dysplasia. Flow cytometric analysis confirmed that bone marrow cells were mostly of neutrophil lineage, with reduced expression of common leukocyte antigens (CD45, CD18) and neutrophil-specific antigen. Bone marrow cells were cytogenetically analyzed for the breakpoint cluster region-Abelson oncogene using multicolor fluorescent in situ hybridization. The genetic aberration was present in 7% of cells, which was a negative result (>10% of cells is considered positive). Euthanasia was elected. Histologic examination showed extensive infiltration of multiple organs by neoplastic myeloid cells, with effacement of lymph node and splenic architecture. The final diagnosis was atypical chronic myeloid leukemia (aCML), an uncommon myeloproliferative disorder with features of myelodysplastic syndromes (dysplasia) and chronic leukemia (neutrophilic leukocytosis with <20% marrow blasts, extramedullary infiltrates). The trilineage dysplasia, lack of monocytosis, and supporting cytogenetics distinguish aCML from CML, chronic neutrophilic leukemia, and chronic myelomonocytic leukemia.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28205462/