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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Benign giant cell tumor on dog's left foot tendon sheath

By Campbell, M Wesley et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2014·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Cytologic findings from a benign giant cell tumor of the tendon sheath in a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 6-year-old male neutered Australian Shepherd was brought in for a lump on the bottom of his left foot. Tests showed that the mass was a benign giant cell tumor of the tendon sheath, which is a type of growth that can occur in dogs. The dog had surgery to remove the tumor and then received radiation therapy to address any remaining cells. Eight months later, he was doing well and the mass had not come back.

People also search for: dog lump on foot · Australian Shepherd tumor treatment · benign giant cell tumor in dogs

Abstract

A 6-year-old male neutered Australian Shepherd dog was presented for evaluation of a subcutaneous mass on the plantar aspect of the proximal left metatarsus. Fine-needle aspirate smears contained numerous plump spindle cells and large multinucleated cells amongst a considerable amount of pink extracellular matrix. Histopathologic diagnosis of the tissue obtained during initial biopsy and eventual surgical cytoreduction of the mass was a benign giant cell tumor of the tendon sheath (GCTTS). Immunohistochemically, the synovioblastic neoplastic cells were diffusely strongly positive for vimentin and S-100, were multifocally moderately positive for cytokeratin AE1/3, and were negative for CD18, muscle-specific actin (MSA), and melanoma-associated antigen (mutated) 1 (MUM-1). The dog recovered from surgery and underwent definitive radiation therapy to treat the local residual disease. Eight months later, the mass had not recurred. The diagnosis of GCTTS in this case supports previously published reports describing GCTTS as a relevant disease entity in dogs, and provides the first documentation of cytologic findings with this tumor. Further investigation is needed to correlate pathologic features with clinical behavior and response to therapy in dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24730372/