Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Signs and types of eye lymphoma in dogs and outcomes
By Lanza, Matthew R. et al.·Published in Veterinary Ophthalmology·2017·Department of Pathobiology School of Veterinary Medicine University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA USA, United States·View original on Crossref →
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Original publication title: Clinical and pathological classification of canine intraocular lymphoma
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 100 dogs diagnosed with intraocular lymphoma (a type of eye cancer) were studied to understand their symptoms and outcomes after treatment. Most of these dogs (61%) had only eye involvement and did not show signs of cancer elsewhere in their bodies at the time of surgery. After having their affected eye removed, these dogs did not experience any disease progression, and those with only eye involvement had a much longer survival time compared to those with more widespread disease. This suggests that if a dog has lymphoma limited to the eye, they may have a better prognosis after surgery.
People also search for: dog eye cancer treatment · canine lymphoma symptoms · dog eye removal recovery
Abstract
AbstractThe objectives of this retrospective study of 100 dogs with intraocular lymphoma were to describe the histomorphologic and immunohistochemical features of canine intraocular lymphoma, determine the proportion of cases with presumed solitary ocular lymphoma (PSOL) compared to multicentric disease, and assess the clinical outcomes of these patients. Selected cases from Penn Vet Diagnostic Laboratory and Comparative Ocular Pathology Lab of Wisconsin (2004–2015) were evaluated and subtyped using the WHO classification system. Peripheral T‐cell lymphoma and diffuse large B‐cell lymphoma were the two most common subtypes. Questionnaires were distributed to the referring veterinarians and veterinary ophthalmologists inquiring about clinical signs at time of enucleation, staging, patient outcome, treatment, and disease progression. Cases were categorized as PSOL if only ocular involvement was noted at the time of diagnosis based on the clinical staging criteria. The majority of cases (61%) did not have systemic involvement at the time of diagnosis, and these cases did not progress postoperatively. Median survival time (MST) was significantly higher for the presumed solitary intraocular cases: 769 vs. 103 days, hazard ratio of 0.23 (95% CI: 0.077–0.68). The subtype of lymphoma did not affect survival time. The results of this study suggest two significant points of clinical interest: the majority of dogs (61%) presented without signs of systemic involvement of lymphoma at the time of enucleation, and dogs with only ocular involvement showed no disease progression postenucleation.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1111/vop.12492