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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with heavy fluid around lungs caused by rare plasma cell tumor

By Swenson, Cheryl L & Nunnelley, Jacqueline·Published in Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc·2026·Department of Pathobiology and Diagnostic Investigation and Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clonal IgG lambda plasmacytoma with Mott cell differentiation causing marked pleural effusion in a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 9-year-old male mixed-breed dog was brought in because he was having trouble breathing. The vet found that he had nearly 2 liters of fluid in his chest, which was causing the breathing problems. After removing the fluid and examining it, they discovered it contained abnormal plasma cells, indicating a type of tumor called a plasmacytoma. Unfortunately, this tumor was likely aggressive and had spread from another location in the body, leading to a poor prognosis.

People also search for: dog breathing problems · pleural effusion in dogs · plasmacytoma treatment for dogs

Abstract

Canine extramedullary plasmacytomas are typically benign tumors of the skin, oral cavity, and alimentary tract that are cured by surgical excision. This tumor is rarely metastatic and aggressive. We report an unusual plasmacytoma in a dog that had been presented because of dyspnea. Aside from evidence of pleural effusion, no cutaneous lesions or other abnormalities were detected on physical examination. Nearly 2 L of pleural fluid were removed by thoracocentesis, and a sample was submitted for cytologic examination. The pleural fluid had increased protein and cell concentrations, with a predominance of individualized, large, round, atypical cells. Those cells frequently had Russell body-like intracytoplasmic structures, as seen on microscopic examination of modified Wright-stained concentrated slide preparations. Together, these findings were strongly supportive of a neoplastic plasma cell exudate. Immunohistochemical (CD3, CD20, MUM1, IgG, λ light chain) staining and B-cell PCR for antigen receptor rearrangement analysis performed on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded pleural cell-pellet sections confirmed a novel, clonal, IgG lambda extramedullary plasmacytoma with Mott cell differentiation that was most likely metastatic from a non-cutaneous primary site. Metastatic plasma cell neoplasia with voluminous serous cavity effusion carries a grave prognosis in humans, but has not been reported previously in dogs, to our knowledge.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41562189/