Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Survival after surgery or radiotherapy for brain tumors in 285 dogs
By Geiger, Rachel et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2025·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Comparison of Survival After Treatment of Presumed Intracranial Meningioma by Radiotherapy or Surgery in 285 Dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 285 dogs diagnosed with suspected brain tumors called intracranial meningiomas were treated with either surgery or radiation therapy. The results showed that dogs who underwent surgery had a median survival of about 10 months, while those treated with radiation lived for nearly 23 months on average. This study suggests that radiation therapy offers significantly better survival rates compared to surgery for dogs with this type of tumor. If your dog has been diagnosed with an intracranial meningioma, discussing radiation therapy with your veterinarian may be beneficial.
People also search for: dog brain tumor treatment · intracranial meningioma survival rate · radiation therapy for dogs with tumors
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The comparative effectiveness of radiotherapy and surgery for treating intracranial meningioma is unknown. OBJECTIVES: To compare survival after treatment of suspected intracranial meningioma by either surgery or radiotherapy. ANIMALS: Two hundred eighty-five companion dogs with suspected intracranial meningiomas presenting to 11 specialty clinics in three countries. METHODS: Parallel cohort comparison study on retrospective data. Dogs diagnosed with intracranial meningioma by board-certified veterinary neurologists or radiologists and treated by radiotherapy or surgery were identified through medical record searches and presenting and survival data extracted. Lesion site was classified as rostro- or caudotentorial and size was measured on contrast magnetic resonance images. Outcome was all-cause death. Analysis of survival by Cox proportional hazards, including selection for optimal multivariable model using lasso, counterfactual modeling including variables associated with treatment allocation and survival. RESULTS: One hundred sixty-eight dogs received radiotherapy and 117 received surgery. All analyses indicated reduced survival associated with surgery compared to radiotherapy. There was a median survival after surgery of 297 (IQR: 99-768) days compared with 696 (IQR: 368-999) for dogs treated by radiation, associated with a univariable hazard ratio of 1.802 (95% CI: 1.357-2.394). Counterfactual modeling estimated a mean survival of 480 (95% CI: 395-564) days after surgery and 673 (95% CI: 565-782) days after radiotherapy, representing a decrease in survival of 29%. Location and size of the lesion were not associated with survival duration. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Dogs with suspected intracranial meningioma have substantially superior survival after radiotherapy compared to surgery.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39968764/