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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Can skin over soft tissue sarcomas in dogs be left during surgery?

By Del Magno, Sara et al.·Published in Veterinary and comparative oncology·2021·Department of Veterinary Medical Sciences, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Evaluation of the neoplastic infiltration of the skin overlying canine subcutaneous soft tissue sarcomas: An explorative study.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 7-year-old mixed-breed dog was diagnosed with a subcutaneous soft tissue sarcoma (sSTS) and underwent surgery to remove the tumor. After the tumor was excised, the skin above it was examined and found to be free of cancer cells in nearly half of the cases. This means that for some dogs with lower-grade tumors, it might be possible to remove less skin during surgery while still effectively treating the cancer. However, higher-grade tumors showed more frequent infiltration, indicating that more aggressive removal may still be necessary for those cases.

People also search for: dog soft tissue sarcoma treatment · canine skin cancer surgery · how much skin to remove for dog tumor

Abstract

Studies regarding the neoplastic infiltration of the skin overlying canine subcutaneous soft tissue sarcoma (sSTS) are lacking. In case of the absence of tumor infiltration, there would be the possibility of leaving this unaffected skin in place, thus simplifying surgery. The aim of the study was to investigate whether the skin overlying sSTSs is infiltrated by neoplastic cells. Dogs with sSTSs treated surgically were prospectively enrolled. After excision, the skin was dissected from the tumor along the natural surgical plane of cleavage and histologically evaluated. Twenty-nine dogs with an sSTS were included (22 grade I, 6 grade II, and 1 grade III). The sSTS-overlying skin was not tumor-infiltrated in 14/29 cases (48.3%). A higher frequency of infiltration was observed in higher grade sSTSs (grades II and III, 100%; P = .006); nevertheless, 8/22 grade I sSTSs (36%) also showed cutaneous infiltration. This infiltration involved the dermis of the skin directly in contact with the tumor (multifocal in 11 and diffuse in four cases). Although the cutaneous tumor infiltration is less frequent in grade I sSTSs and a wide excision may still be the safest treatment for any sSTS for a greater possibility of local control, this study opens the possibility to a less aggressive cutaneous excision, but still with a local curative intent, as only the skin directly in contact with the sSTS has been proven to be tumor-infiltrated. Additional studies are warranted to confirm that excision of only this skin may guarantee a complete local control, especially in lower-grade sSTSs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33423367/