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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Benign and cancerous bone growths in dogs' mouths explained

By Soltero-Rivera, M et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2015·Department of Clinical Studies, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Benign and Malignant Proliferative Fibro-osseous and Osseous Lesions of the Oral Cavity of Dogs.

Species:
dog
OsteosarcomaMovement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A 7-year-old mixed-breed dog was diagnosed with a growth in the mouth that turned out to be a type of benign tumor called an ossifying fibroma. After imaging and further evaluation, the vet found that most of the lesions were benign, but some were low-grade osteosarcoma, which is a type of cancer. Treatment varied, but most dogs with benign tumors responded well, with many showing complete recovery after treatment. However, one dog with low-grade osteosarcoma had a recurrence after surgery.

People also search for: dog mouth tumor treatment · ossifying fibroma in dogs · low-grade osteosarcoma in dogs

Abstract

Ossifying fibroma (OF) and fibrous dysplasia (FD) are benign, intraosseous, proliferative fibro-osseous lesions (PFOLs) characterized by replacement of normal bone by a fibrous matrix with various degrees of mineralization and ossification. Osteomas are benign tumors composed of mature, well-differentiated bone. Clinical, imaging, and histologic features of 15 initially diagnosed benign PFOLs and osteomas of the canine oral cavity were evaluated. Final diagnoses after reevaluation were as follows: OF (3 cases), FD (4 cases), low-grade osteosarcoma (LG-OSA) (3 cases), and osteoma (5 cases). Histology alone often did not result in a definitive diagnosis for PFOL. OF appeared as a well-circumscribed, radiopaque mass with some degree of bone lysis on imaging. Most lesions of FD showed soft tissue opacity with bone lysis and ill-defined margins. Low-grade OSA appeared as a lytic lesion with a mixed opacity and ill-defined margins. Osteomas were characterized by a mineralized, expansile, well-circumscribed lesion. Although histologic features of PFOLs were typically bland, the lesions diagnosed as LG-OSA had some features of malignancy (eg, bone invasion or a higher mitotic index). Treatment varied widely. Of the 10 dogs with benign PFOL or osteoma with known outcome (10/12), 9 showed either complete response (6/10) or stable disease (3/10) after treatment. Of the 2 dogs with LG-OSA with known outcome, 1 showed complete response after curative intent surgery, but 1 patient had recurrence after partial maxillectomy. Definitive diagnosis of mandibular/maxillary PFOL is challenging via histopathologic examination alone, and accurate diagnosis is best achieved through assimilation of clinical, imaging, and histopathologic features.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25957357/