Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Ferret developed kidney cancer after cysts found on both kidneys
By Wong, Amanda D et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2021·From the Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Development of renal adenocarcinoma in a ferret with renal cortical cysts (Mustela putorius furo).
- Species:
- rodent
Plain-English summary
A 5.5-year-old female ferret was found to have multiple kidney cysts during a routine check-up, but she showed no symptoms for over 20 months. Eventually, one cyst became larger and more complex, leading to a high blood urea nitrogen level and the development of hydronephrosis (swelling of the kidney due to urine buildup). After surgery to remove the affected kidney, it was discovered that the cyst had turned into renal adenocarcinoma (kidney cancer). Unfortunately, the ferret's condition worsened after surgery, and she was euthanized due to complications, including cancer spread to a lymph node.
People also search for: ferret kidney cysts · ferret cancer symptoms · ferret surgery recovery · kidney disease in ferrets · ferret health monitoring
Abstract
CASE DESCRIPTION: A 5.5-year-old 0.929-kg spayed female domestic ferret (Mustela putorius furo) underwent serial abdominal ultrasonographic and clinicopathologic examinations after multiple renal cysts were detected bilaterally during a routine examination. CLINICAL FINDINGS: The ferret was apparently healthy at the start of the monitoring period and had no clinical signs for > 20 months. Four months after the initial examination, the largest cyst became increasingly mineralized; 17 months after detection, it had increased in size and become amorphous, and the ferret's plasma BUN concentration was mildly high. Within 21 months after the first visit, a nodule was detectable, and hydronephrosis developed in the kidney with the largest cyst. Findings for fine-needle aspirates from the nodule were consistent with renal carcinoma. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: Contrast-enhanced CT revealed severe unilateral nephromegaly with no contrast uptake in the affected ureter. Following surgical removal of the affected kidney, histologic examination identified renal adenocarcinoma replacing the entire renal cortex and medulla. The ferret was euthanized postoperatively because of declining condition. On necropsy, metastasis to a mesenteric lymph node was identified; comorbidities included 2 other neoplasms and acute, severe injury of the contralateral kidney. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Neoplastic transformation of a renal cyst was suspected in the ferret of this report on the basis of observed ultrasonographic changes over time and extensive infiltration of the neoplasm throughout the affected kidney. Renal cysts are linked to renal neoplasia in other species, and the findings for this patient supported the need for periodic monitoring of renal cysts in ferrets.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34757937/