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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog thyroid cancer survival after CT scan staging

By Giannasi, Chiara et al.·Published in The Veterinary record·2021·Internal Medicine Department, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Canine thyroid carcinoma prognosis following the utilisation of computed tomography assisted staging.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs diagnosed with thyroid cancer underwent CT scans to check for the spread of the disease before treatment. The study found that many of these dogs had cancer that had already spread, but surgery significantly improved their chances of living longer. While the stage of cancer didn't seem to affect survival rates, dogs that had surgery did better overall compared to those who only received medication. This suggests that even dogs with advanced thyroid cancer might benefit from surgery.

People also search for: dog thyroid cancer treatment · canine thyroid carcinoma prognosis · dog surgery for cancer · what to expect after dog thyroid surgery

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Metastatic disease is frequently present at the time of diagnosis of canine thyroid carcinoma; however, utilisation of computed tomography (CT) alone for staging pre-treatment has been rarely reported in the veterinary literature. METHODS: The aims of this retrospective study were to stage affected dogs using CT findings of the cervical and thoracic regions, combined with histopathology/cytology results, in order to assess whether metastatic disease/WHO staging was of prognostic significance. RESULTS: Fifty-eight dogs were included in the study. Classification of cases into WHO stages I, II, III and IV were 10%, 50%, 9% and 31%, respectively. No statistically significant effect of WHO stage classification on overall survival/follow-up time was found (P = .576). Surgery resulted in a statistically significant increase in overall survival/follow-up time (P < .01). There was no statistically significant effect on overall survival/follow-up time in dogs that received medical therapy, either as sole therapy or as an adjunctive post-surgery (P = .198). CONCLUSION: In summary, this study documents the metastatic rate of canine thyroid carcinoma using CT for staging pre-treatment. Staging utilising CT revealed a higher distant metastatic rate in dogs with thyroid carcinoma when compared to historical studies using different imaging techniques. As long-term outcomes are possible for cases with advanced disease, surgical intervention could still be considered.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34241838/