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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How well cytology diagnoses prostate problems in dogs

By Powe, Joshua R. et al.·Published in Veterinary Clinical Pathology·2004·View original on Crossref

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Original publication title: Evaluation of the cytologic diagnosis of canine prostatic disorders

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 25 adult dogs with suspected prostate issues underwent tests to diagnose their conditions using a technique called ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration (US-FNA) and other methods. The results showed that in 80% of the cases, the cytology (cell analysis) matched the final diagnosis made through more invasive tissue sampling. Most of the time, the cytology was accurate, but there were a few cases where the results didn’t agree, often due to the nature of the disease rather than the sampling method itself. This study suggests that cytology can be a reliable way to diagnose prostate problems in dogs.

People also search for: dog prostate problems symptoms · ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration for dogs · canine prostatic disease diagnosis

Abstract

Background: Canine prostatic disease is commonly investigated using cytologic techniques, especially now that ultrasound‐guided fine needle cell aspiration (US‐ENA) is widely available. Few studies, however, have evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of prostatic cytology. Objective: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of cytologic investigation of prostatic disease using US‐FNA and other methods in comparison with histopathologic diagnosis.Methods: Cytologic and histopathologic specimens of prostate or paraprostatic tissue from 25 adult dogs were retrospectively evaluated. Cytologic samples were obtained by US‐FNA, prostatic massage, or direct impression smears or aspirates of tissue at surgery. Histopathologic sections were obtained from tissue collected by biopsy or at necropsy.Results: Cytologic diagnoses were categorized as nondiagnostic (n = 2); cyst (n = 1); squamous metaplasia (n = 2); inflammation (n = 4); benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH; n = 5); inflammation and BPH (n = 3); inflammation, BPH, and neoplasia (n = 1); inflammation and neoplasia (n = 3); and neoplasia (n = 4). Cytologic diagnoses agreed with final histologic diagnoses in 20 of the 25 cases (80%). Of those samples collected by US‐FNA, 75% were concordant. Four samples obtained by US‐FNA and 1 sample obtained by prostatic massage and wash had discordant results.Conclusions: The results of this study suggest strong agreement between cytologic and histopathologic diagnoses for prostatic conditions. Discordance in results obtained by US‐FNA usually was the result of the pathologic process rather than a failure to obtain an appropriate sample.

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Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1939-165x.2004.tb00365.x