Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Canine rhabdomyosarcoma tumor behavior and ezrin protein study
By Connell, Dana R et al.·Published in Veterinary and comparative oncology·2020·Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Biological behaviour and ezrin expression in canine rhabdomyosarcomas: 25 cases (1990-2012).
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 2-year-old dog with a soft tissue tumor was diagnosed with rhabdomyosarcoma, a type of cancer that can be aggressive and spread quickly. Many of the dogs in the study had already developed metastatic disease (cancer that has spread) by the time they were diagnosed. Unfortunately, the average survival time for these dogs was only about 10 days after diagnosis. The study also found that a protein called ezrin, which is linked to cancer spread, was present in most of the tumors, suggesting it might play a role in how aggressive this cancer can be in dogs.
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Abstract
There are few published reports of canine rhabdomyosarcomas. In human paediatrics, rhabdomyosarcomas account for 5%-10% of all tumours and >50% of soft tissue sarcomas. They have an aggressive biologic behaviour; most patients develop diffuse metastatic disease. Ezrin, a cytoskeleton linker protein, has been correlated with metastasis in a number of tumours, including rhabdomyosarcomas. The goal of this study was to describe dogs with non-urinary rhabdomyosarcomas including clinical findings, ezrin expression and outcome. Twenty-five dogs with rhabdomyosarcomas were identified from two institutions' databases. Signalment, primary tumour location, cytologic and histologic findings, metastatic sites, treatments, survival time and necropsy results were recorded. Immunohistochemical staining for ezrin expression was performed on archived samples; cellular localization of ezrin was characterized. The mean and median age of all patients was 4.3 and 2 years, respectively. Subcutaneous and retrobulbar/orbital were the most common primary tumour locations. Sixteen dogs had metastatic disease at diagnosis. Three dogs presented with diffuse disease where a primary tumour could not be identified. A round cell tumour was the initial diagnosis in 32% of cases, and 76% of cases required immunohistochemistry to establish the diagnosis. The median survival was 10 days. Twenty-one cases had archived samples available for ezrin staining; all but one was positive and exhibited both membranous and cytoplasmic localization. Rhabdomyosarcomas occur in young dogs, may have a round cell appearance, and exhibit aggressive biologic behaviour. Given ezrin's defined role in metastasis, its observed expression in the tumours in this study suggest its possible role in canine rhabdomyosarcoma's aggressive biologic behaviour.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32246519/