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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cranial mediastinal tumors in nine dogs and surgery outcomes

By Liptak, J M et al.·Published in Veterinary and comparative oncology·2008·Animal Cancer Center College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Cranial mediastinal carcinomas in nine dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Nine dogs were diagnosed with tumors in the chest area, specifically cranial mediastinal carcinomas, which caused symptoms related to a mass pressing on nearby organs. Some of these dogs had specific types of thyroid cancer, while others had different types of carcinomas. Surgery was attempted on most of the dogs, and while they all survived the procedure, a few faced complications like blood clots in the lungs. Treatments after surgery included chemotherapy for some dogs, and overall, the dogs lived for an average of about 243 days after diagnosis.

People also search for: dog chest tumor symptoms · dog thyroid cancer treatment · dog surgery complications · dog cancer survival rates

Abstract

Nine dogs were diagnosed with cranial mediastinal carcinomas. Based on histological and immunohistochemical analysis, four dogs were diagnosed with ectopic follicular cell thyroid carcinomas, one dog with ectopic medullary cell thyroid carcinoma, two dogs with neuroendocrine carcinomas and two dogs with anaplastic carcinomas. Clinical signs and physical examination findings were associated with a space-occupying mass, although one dog was diagnosed with functional hyperthyroidism. Surgical resection was attempted in eight dogs. The cranial mediastinal mass was invasive either into the heart or into the cranial vena cava in three dogs. Resection was complete in six dogs and unresectable in two dogs. All dogs survived surgery, but four dogs developed pulmonary thromboembolism and two dogs died of respiratory complications postoperatively. Adjunctive therapies included pre-operative radiation therapy (n=1) and postoperative chemotherapy (n=3). Three dogs had metastasis at the time of diagnosis, but none developed metastasis following surgery. The overall median survival time was 243 days. Local invasion, pleural effusion and metastasis did not have a negative impact on survival time in this small case series.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19178660/