PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with skin melanoma showing unusual cell type on ear base

By Mendes, Ricardo E et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc·2024·Department of Pathology, United States·View original on PubMed

PetCaseFinder translated the abstract of this peer-reviewed paper into plain English so pet owners can read it. We do not publish original research — every detail traces back to the citation above. How we work →

Original publication title: Dermal melanoma with plasmacytoid differentiation in a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 10-year-old spayed female Staffordshire Terrier was brought in because of a mass on the left ear base. Tests showed that the mass was a type of skin cancer called dermal melanoma, which had some unusual features making it look like other types of tumors. Unfortunately, after a month, the dog developed new masses and had worsening symptoms, including swelling and lameness. Sadly, the decision was made to euthanize her due to the severity of her condition.

People also search for: dog ear mass · Staffordshire Terrier skin cancer · melanoma treatment in dogs

Abstract

A 10-y-old spayed female Staffordshire Terrier dog was evaluated because of a cutaneous left ear base mass. Cytology revealed sheets of cells with anisocytosis and anisokaryosis, round-to-oval or plasmacytoid cytoplasm, and round, central, or eccentric nuclei; binucleate cells were present. Cytologic findings were consistent with a round cell tumor (plasmacytoma or agranular mast cell tumor), amelanotic melanoma, or anaplastic carcinoma. Histologically, neoplastic cells were polygonal to elongate, with round-to-oval nuclei and prominent nucleoli and arranged in sheets and nests on a fibrovascular stroma. Neoplastic cells with plasmacytoid morphology (round, glassy, eosinophilic cytoplasm with eccentric nuclei) were present in ~30% of the neoplasm. There were 18 mitoses in 2.37 mm(10 FN22/40× fields). Neoplastic cells had cytoplasmic immunolabeling for melan A and PNL2 and no immunolabeling for AE3/1 and MUM1, consistent with a dermal melanoma with plasmacytoid differentiation. The patient was re-evaluated ~1 mo after the first biopsy because of local recurrence of the original mass and new masses on the interscapular area and right elbow; these neoplasms were histologically identical to the original submission, plus scattered neoplastic cells in the new masses contained brown cytoplasmic pigment. The dog was euthanized because of swelling and hemorrhage of the tumors and right pelvic limb lameness. Our findings were consistent with a dermal melanoma with plasmacytoid features that were similar to human plasmacytoid melanoma, a rare variant of human melanoma that is diagnostically challenging as it may mimic a plasmacytoma.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39165111/