Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Ulcerated tail melanoma in 11-month-old Russian blue cat
By Munday, J S et al.·Published in New Zealand veterinary journal·2011·Department of Pathobiology·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Cutaneous malignant melanoma in an 11-month-old Russian blue cat.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
An 11-month-old Russian blue cat developed a grey mass at the base of its tail that grew slowly over two months before becoming ulcerated. After the mass was surgically removed, it was diagnosed as a malignant melanoma. Unfortunately, the cat later developed another melanoma on its side, and by 26 months of age, it showed signs of lethargy and loss of appetite. A post-mortem examination revealed multiple metastases throughout the body, indicating the cancer had spread. This case highlights that while rare, malignant melanoma can occur in young cats and may behave aggressively like it does in humans.
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Abstract
CASE HISTORY: A grey mass developed on the tail base of an 11-month-old Russian blue cat. The mass grew slowly for 2 months and then became ulcerated. CLINICAL FINDINGS: The mass was excised, and histology revealed it to be a malignant melanoma. Skin adjacent to the melanoma and underlying tissue contained large aggregates of melanin and numerous melanophages. Seven months later, an additional malignant melanoma was excised from the skin on the left thorax. Three months after the second melanoma was excised, the left axillary lymph nodes were enlarged; four were excised, and found to contain metastases. The cat became lethargic and anorexic, and was subject to euthanasia at 26 months of age. Post-mortem examination revealed numerous small well-circumscribed melanomas scattered within the S/C tissue overlying the left thorax and within the left axilla. These were interpreted to be in-transit metastases. Metastatic foci were also visible within the spleen, liver, lungs, lymph nodes and a rib; numerous small melanomas were also present throughout the mesentery. DIAGNOSIS: Cutaneous malignant melanoma with numerous distant and in-transit metastases. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Although cutaneous malignant melanomas appear to be rare in young cats, they can display a similar clinical behaviour to malignant melanomas in humans, and a guarded prognosis should be suggested for neoplasms of this type. In humans, in-transit metastases are a well-recognised consequence of removing lymph nodes that drain areas containing neoplastic disease. This manifestation of metastatic disease has not previously been reported in the veterinary literature.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21541889/