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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Acute megakaryoblastic leukemia diagnosed in a 5-year-old dog

By Suter, Steven E et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2007·Department of Veterinary Surgical and Radiological Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: CD34+, CD41+ acute megakaryoblastic leukemia in a dog.

Species:
dog
Breathing & coughDogs

Plain-English summary

A 5-year-old female German Shepherd was brought in for a routine spay surgery, but blood tests showed she had low red blood cells and very low platelets. Further tests revealed she had a type of cancer called acute megakaryoblastic leukemia, which affects blood cell production. Despite treatment, her condition worsened, and she continued to have severe anemia and low platelets. Sadly, the decision was made to euthanize her due to the progression of the disease.

People also search for: dog leukemia symptoms · German Shepherd blood test results · dog cancer treatment options

Abstract

A clinically normal, 5-year-old intact female German Shepherd dog was presented to the local veterinarian to be spayed. Results of a preoperative CBC included mild nonregenerative anemia, severe thrombocytopenia, and 17% unclassified cells. On cytologic examination of aspirates from the dog's enlarged spleen and peripheral lymph nodes, a population of primitive round cells that occasionally resembled megakaryocytes was observed. A bone marrow aspirate specimen was markedly hypercellular with approximately 65% of marrow cells comprising a homogeneous population of immature hematopoietic cells similar to those found in the spleen, lymph nodes, and peripheral blood. Using immunocytochemical stains with canine-specific antibodies, all neoplastic cells strongly expressed cytoplasmic CD41 and 20-70% of the neoplastic cells expressed CD34 weakly to moderately. Rare (<0.5%) neoplastic cells weakly expressed vWF. The cells were negative for all other markers. Based on these results and the morphology of the neoplastic cells, a diagnosis of acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (AMegL) was made. In spite of treatment, results of a CBC performed 1 week later indicated progressive anemia and thrombocytopenia, and the dog was euthanized. To our knowledge, this report documents the first case of canine AMegL diagnosed with both anti-canine CD34 and CD41 antibodies.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17806080/