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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with ear cancer that spread to lungs and lymph nodes

By Romanucci, Mariarita et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2011·Department of Comparative Biomedical Sciences, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Aural carcinoma with chondroid metaplasia at metastatic sites in a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

An 8-year-old male pug was diagnosed with a type of ear cancer that had spread to multiple areas, including both lungs and several lymph nodes. The cancer cells were found in the ear canal and had unusual features, indicating a complex form of cancer. Despite the severity of the disease, the specific treatments used and the outcome for this dog were not detailed in the study. If your dog is showing signs of ear problems or unusual growths, it's important to consult your veterinarian for a thorough evaluation and treatment options.

People also search for: dog ear cancer symptoms · pug cancer treatment · dog lung metastasis signs

Abstract

A case of aural carcinoma with chondroid metaplasia at metastatic foci in an 8-year-old male pug is described. Multiple metastases in both lungs and the right submandibular, parotid, retropharyngeal, cervical and prescapular lymph nodes were detected. Histologically, the skin of the right ear canal appeared to be diffusely infiltrated by cords and nests of neoplastic epithelial cells, showing multifocal contiguity with the overlying hyperplastic squamous epithelium. Most of the carcinomatous cells were arranged in a glandular-like pattern, with formation of lumens containing epithelial cells attached to the peripheral cell layer by elongated intercellular bridges. Scattered foci of keratinization with central accumulations of compact, laminated keratin were also observed, and histochemical stains failed to detect mucinous secretory material. Even though histological and histochemical findings were compatible with a diagnosis of acantholytic squamous cell carcinoma, CAM5.2 immunostaining was detectable in the majority, although not all, neoplastic cells, confirming a diagnosis of poorly differentiated ceruminous gland carcinoma. Pulmonary metastatic nodules revealed multifocal areas of cartilaginous metaplasia with apparent transition of carcinomatous cells to chondroid cells, showing nuclear atypia and focal cytokeratin immunostaining. Carcinomatous cells surrounding chondroid areas also revealed focal vimentin and S100 immunoreactivity. Histological evidence of transition between the two components, as well as the presence of intermediate cells displaying both epithelial and mesenchymal immunohistochemical features, strongly indicated a final diagnosis of carcinosarcoma, in which chondrosarcomatous elements were derived from carcinoma cells.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21651630/