Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Signs, treatment, and survival in 116 dogs with thymoma
By Robat, Cecilia S et al.Ā·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical AssociationĀ·2013Ā·Department of Medical SciencesĀ·View original on PubMed ā
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Original publication title: Clinical features, treatment options, and outcome in dogs with thymoma: 116 cases (1999-2010).
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 116 dogs diagnosed with thymoma, a type of tumor in the thymus gland, showed various symptoms, including some with myasthenia gravis, which causes muscle weakness. Most dogs underwent surgery to remove the tumor, and those that did had a much better chance of survival, living an average of over 600 days compared to just over 70 days for those who did not have surgery. The study found that having another tumor at the time of diagnosis or not having surgery significantly affected how long the dogs lived after treatment. Overall, dogs with thymoma had a good prognosis following surgical removal of the tumor.
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe clinical signs, diagnostic findings, treatment, and outcome and determine factors associated with survival time for dogs with thymoma. DESIGN: Multi-institutional retrospective case series. ANIMALS: 116 dogs with thymoma. PROCEDURES: Medical records were searched for information regarding signalment, physical examination findings, results of laboratory testing and diagnostic imaging, medical and surgical treatment, and survival data. RESULTS: Of the 116 dogs with thymoma, 44 (38%) were Labrador Retrievers and Golden Retrievers. Twenty of 116 (17%) dogs had signs of myasthenia gravis (diagnosis was confirmed for 13 dogs). At the time of thymoma diagnosis, 40 (34%) dogs had hypercalcemia, 8 (7%) dogs had a concurrent immune-mediated disease, and 31 (27%) dogs had another tumor; 16 (14%) dogs developed a second nonthymic tumor at a later date. Tumor excision was performed for 84 dogs, after which 14 (17%) had tumor recurrence; prognosis was good for dogs undergoing a second surgery. Median survival time with and without surgical treatment was 635 and 76 days, respectively. Presence of another tumor at the time of thymoma diagnosis, lack of surgical excision, and higher pathological stage were significantly associated with shorter survival time. Hypercalcemia and presence of myasthenia gravis or megaesophagus at the time of thymoma diagnosis, histopathologic subtype of thymoma, or tumor development at a later date was not associated with survival time. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Dogs with thymoma, even those with a large tumor burden or a paraneoplastic syndrome, had a good prognosis following surgery. Surgical treatment, tumor stage, and the presence of a second tumor at diagnosis influenced survival time.
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Search related cases āOriginal publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24171375/