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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat with pink corneal mass diagnosed as fibrosarcoma

By Strong, Travis D et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2016·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Corneal fibrosarcoma in a cat.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 12-year-old spayed female Domestic Short-haired cat was brought in for a slowly growing pink mass on her left eye. This mass was diagnosed as an intermediate-grade corneal fibrosarcoma, which may have developed due to chronic irritation from a previous corneal sequestrum (a dead tissue area on the cornea). To prevent any potential spread of the cancer, the veterinarian performed surgery to remove the entire eye. Six months later, the cat was doing well and showed no signs of cancer returning or spreading.

People also search for: cat eye mass treatment · corneal fibrosarcoma in cats · cat eye surgery recovery

Abstract

PURPOSE: To present the clinicopathologic features of a Domestic Short-haired cat with spontaneous, intermediate-grade corneal fibrosarcoma, possibly secondary to chronic corneal irritation associated with a corneal sequestrum. METHODS: A 12-year-old, spayed female Domestic Short-haired cat was evaluated for a slowly growing, pink, exophytic mass affecting the left cornea. The cat had presented 6 years previously for bilateral brown corneal sequestra, as well as 3 years previously for a small pale growth on the left cornea hypothesized to be an epithelial inclusion cyst and a corneal ulcer affecting the right eye. Incisional biopsy of the corneal mass indicated intermediate-grade corneal fibrosarcoma within the corneal stroma. Owing to the potential for malignant behavior, the left globe was enucleated. Routine systemic staging was performed prior to surgery with no evidence of metastasis. RESULTS: Definitive diagnosis of corneal fibrosarcoma was made through histopathologic examination of the incisional biopsy. There was an elevated mitotic index, indicating an intermediate-grade phenotype. Histopathology of the enucleated globe substantiated the initial findings, and complete tumor resection was confirmed. Subjacent to the corneal fibrosarcoma, there was a region of necrotic tissue suggestive of a corneal sequestrum. Six months after diagnosis and enucleation, the patient remained healthy with no signs of local spread or distant metastasis. CONCLUSIONS: To the authors' knowledge, this is the first documented case of a corneal fibrosarcoma in a cat.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26840792/