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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Clonality testing in dogs with swollen lymph nodes from Leishmania

By Melendez-Lazo, Antonio et al.·Published in PloS one·2019·LABOKLIN GmbH & Co. KG, Germany·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clonality testing in the lymph nodes from dogs with lymphadenomegaly due to Leishmania infantum infection.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 31 dogs diagnosed with leishmaniosis (a parasitic infection) showed enlarged lymph nodes, which can sometimes be confused with lymphoma (a type of cancer). Testing revealed that most of these dogs had a normal immune response, but a few had abnormal results that could mimic lymphoma. Specifically, 3 dogs had clonal arrangements in their immune cells, which could lead to a misdiagnosis. The study highlights the importance of careful interpretation of test results in dogs with leishmaniosis to avoid confusion with cancer diagnoses.

People also search for: dog swollen lymph nodes leishmaniasis · lymphoma vs leishmaniosis in dogs · dog lymph node biopsy results

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: In southern European countries, multicentric lymphoma and leishmaniosis are the main differential diagnoses in dogs presented with generalized lymphadenomegaly. The cytological examination is in some cases inconclusive and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for antigen receptor rearrangement (PARR) has become a common method to confirm or rule out a lymphoproliferative neoplasia. According to the literature, leishmaniosis may lead to clonal arrangements and therefore to a false diagnosis of lymphoma, but this assumption is made from a single leishmania infected dog. Therefore, the objective of this study was to prospectively evaluate results from PARR in dogs with lymphadenomegaly due to clinical leishmaniosis at the moment of diagnosis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: 31 dogs with a diagnosis of leishmaniosis based on the LeishVet guidelines were included in the study. Samples from enlarged lymph nodes were taken for cytological examination, clonality testing and Leishmania infantum PCR. RESULTS: All 31 dogs had medium to high positive antibody titers against Leishmania spp. and 30/31 had a positive Leishmania PCR from the lymph node. A polyclonal arrangement for B cells (immunoglobulin heavy chain gene) and T cells (T-cell receptor gamma chain gene) antigen receptors was found in 28/31 dogs. Two out of 31 dogs showed a monoclonal arrangement for Ig with high (1:2) and low (1:7) polyclonal background respectively; and one of the 31 dogs showed a monoclonal arrangement for T cell receptor with low (1:3) polyclonal background. CONCLUSION: Infections with Leishmania infantum resulted in clonal rearrangement, and therefore in a possible false diagnosis of lymphoma, in 3 out of 31 dogs (9.7%). Although, PARR is a useful method to differentiate lymphoma from reactive lymphoid hyperplasia in dogs with leishmaniosis, mono-/biclonal results should be interpreted carefully, especially in the presence of any degree of polyclonal background, and together with other clinicopathological findings.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31841533/