Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Survival after surgery for nonnasal bone chondrosarcoma in dogs
By Waltman, Suzanne Shelly et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2007·Department of surgical and Radiological Science, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Clinical outcome of nonnasal chondrosarcoma in dogs: thirty-one cases (1986-2003).
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with chondrosarcoma (a type of bone cancer) were treated with wide surgical excision to see how it affected their survival. The dogs that underwent surgery lived much longer, with an average survival time of over 8 years, compared to just under 1.5 years for those who only had a biopsy. While surgery improved survival, about 28% of the treated dogs still developed metastasis (cancer spread). This shows that while surgery can help dogs live longer, there is still a risk of the cancer spreading.
People also search for: dog chondrosarcoma treatment · dog bone cancer survival rate · chondrosarcoma surgery outcome
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate metastatic rate and survival times of dogs with chondrosarcoma of nonnasal bony sites treated by wide surgical excision. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective study. ANIMALS: Dogs (n=31) with chondrosarcoma. METHODS: Medical records were retrospectively reviewed to identify dogs with chondrosarcoma of bone in potentially surgically accessible sites. When complete information was not available in the medical record, owners and referring veterinarians were contacted by telephone to evaluate the course of disease and survival times. When possible, histopathologic diagnosis was confirmed by a single board certified pathologist and tumors were histologically graded. RESULTS: Dogs treated by wide surgical excision (n=18) had a mean survival time of 3097 days and did not reach median survival time. Dogs untreated except for diagnostic biopsy (n =13) had a median survival time of 523 days and a mean survival time of 495 days. Method of treatment and tumor grade predicted survival time (P=.016 and P=.007, respectively). Metastatic rate was 28% for treated dogs and 15% for untreated dogs, with no significant difference between the 2 groups (P=.39). CONCLUSIONS: Wide surgical excision significantly improves survival time for dogs with chondrosarcoma of nonnasal bony sites, but does not affect the likelihood of metastasis. Grade may be prognostic for survival. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Surgical excision benefits dogs with chondrosarcoma and can result in prolonged survival times. Metastasis still occurs in approximately 1 of 4 dogs even after surgical resection.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17461952/