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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Tiny mammary gland tumors with neuroendocrine cells in a 13-year-old

By Nagahara, Rei et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc·2016·Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Japan·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Canine mammary minute oncocytomas with neuroendocrine differentiation associated with multifocal acinar cell oncocytic metaplasia.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 13-year-old female Labrador Retriever was found to have two tiny tumors in her left mammary gland, along with several other mammary tumors. These small tumors were identified through microscopic examination and showed minimal abnormal cell growth. The diagnosis indicated that these tumors were oncocytomas, which are a type of tumor that can have neuroendocrine features. While the study did not detail specific treatments, the identification of these tumors can help veterinarians determine the best course of action for management.

People also search for: dog mammary tumor treatment · Labrador Retriever cancer symptoms · oncocytoma in dogs

Abstract

Two solitary and minute tumors of 1 and 1.5 mm diameter were identified by microscopy in the left fourth mammary gland of a 13-year-old female Labrador Retriever dog, in addition to multiple mammary gland tumors. The former tumors were well circumscribed and were composed of small-to-large polyhedral neoplastic oncocytes with finely granular eosinophilic cytoplasm, and were arranged in solid nests separated by fine fibrovascular septa. Scattered lumina of variable sizes containing eosinophilic secretory material were evident. Cellular atypia was minimal, and no mitotic figures were visible. One tumor had several oncocytic cellular foci revealing cellular transition, with perivascular pseudorosettes consisting of columnar epithelial cells surrounding the fine vasculature. Scattered foci of mammary acinar cell hyperplasia showing oncocytic metaplasia were also observed. Immunohistochemically, the cytoplasm of neoplastic cells of the 2 microtumors showed diffuse immunoreactivity to anti-cytokeratin antibody AE1/AE3, and finely granular immunoreactivity for 60-kDa heat shock protein, mitochondrial membrane ATP synthase complex V beta subunit, and chromogranin A. One tumor also had oncocytic cellular foci forming perivascular pseudorosettes showing cellular membrane immunoreactivity for neural cell adhesion molecule. The tumors were negative for smooth muscle actin, neuron-specific enolase, vimentin, desmin, S100, and synaptophysin. Ultrastructural observation confirmed the abundant mitochondria in the cytoplasm of both neoplastic and hyperplastic cells, the former cells also having neuroendocrine granule-like electron-dense bodies. From these results, our case was diagnosed with mammary oncocytomas accompanied by neuroendocrine differentiation. Scattered foci of mammary oncocytosis might be related to the multicentric occurrence of these oncocytomas.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27698175/