Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Concomitant melanoma and keratoma affecting the equine digit: clinical, pathological, and long-term follow-up findings.
- Journal:
- BMC veterinary research
- Year:
- 2024
- Authors:
- Bulnes, Fernando et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Large Animal · Spain
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
This case report discusses a 12-year-old bay Andalusian gelding that had both a keratoma (a type of hoof growth) and a melanoma (a type of skin cancer) on his right front hoof. The horse underwent surgery to remove the keratoma and a pigmented lesion near the hoof, which was found to be a melanoma. After surgery, he received chemotherapy with cisplatin, and follow-up tests showed that while the tumor partially shrank, a dark area remained on the hoof. Over 26 months of monitoring, there were no signs of the cancer spreading to other parts of the horse's body, and he remained healthy and sound. This case highlights the importance of early diagnosis and treatment for hoof melanomas, which can be serious but may be managed effectively.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This case report details a long-term follow-up of a hoof melanoma with dermo-epidermal activity (resembling Spreading Superficial Melanoma (SSM)) in a bay horse with a history of a right front hoof keratoma. Melanomas involving the horse's foot are seldom reported and usually diagnosed as anaplastic melanomas based on signalment and post-mortem examination. The clinical-pathological characteristics of the foot melanoma in this bay horse are consistent with SSM-like described in humans, which is considered an intermediate malignant tumour attending their biological behaviour. However, a definitive diagnosis is limited by the single case and the lack of references in horses. CASE PRESENTATION: A 12-year-old bay Andalusian gelding underwent keratoma removal on the lateral aspect of the hoof wall. A partial resection of the hoof wall was performed for this purpose. Additionally, a plaque-like, hyperkeratotic pigmented lesion, 2 × 2X0,4 cm in size, was observed at the lateral aspect of the coronary band and was also resected for histopathological examination. Microscopically, a melanocytic tumour, characterised by small nests of large polygonal or epithelioid cells infiltrating the basal and suprabasal epidermis, the dermo - epidermal junction, and the superficial dermis, was observed. The neoplastic cells exhibited large euchromatic nuclei, prominent nucleoli, moderate pleomorphism and 4 mitotic figures per 2,37mm; variable amounts of dark granules (melanin) were present in the cytoplasm, as well as in numerous peritumoral macrophages. The immunophenotype of the tumour cells was PNL2 +  +  + , S100 +  + , AE1/AE3-. A diagnosis of melanoma with dermo-epidermal junction and marked intraepidermal activity (consistent with superficial spreading melanoma) was made. A magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) performed, revealed no further invasion into surrounding structures. Treatment was based on surgical resection and multiple local chemotherapy sessions with cisplatin were applied. The biopsies obtained after treatment showed partial regression of the tumour and different stages of healing. After 26 months of follow-up, there was no signs of malignant spreading into surrounding structures including the pedal bone and distal metastasis but a dark - coloured area persists over the lateral aspect of the coronary band. CONCLUSIONS: This case presents a concomitant keratoma and melanoma with dermo - epidermal activity, resembling a spreading superficial melanoma. After a follow - up of 26 months the horse remains healthy and sound providing new information for clinicians and pathologists. Despite the poor prognosis associated with foot malignant melanocytic tumours, it is important that an early and accurate diagnosis is reached through different diagnostic modalities such as advanced imaging techniques and histopathology. Additionally, these findings demonstrate that the current classification and prognosis for equine foot melanomas are insufficient.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39354566/