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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Ventral belly wall angiosarcoma tumors in cats explained

By Bellamy, Edward et al.Ā·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgeryĀ·2024Ā·Animal Health Trust, United KingdomĀ·View original on PubMed →

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Original publication title: Feline ventral abdominal wall angiosarcoma: haemangiosarcoma or lymphangiosarcoma? Clinical and pathological characteristics in nine cases.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of nine cats with a mass on their belly were diagnosed with a rare type of cancer called angiosarcoma, which can be either haemangiosarcoma or lymphangiosarcoma. Most of these cats showed signs of a discharge from the mass, and some had suspected lung spread of the disease. After treatment, which included surgery and other therapies, six of the cats were euthanized due to worsening disease. The average survival time was about five to six months, but two cats with haemangiosarcoma lived significantly longer, surviving over 10 months.

People also search for: cat belly mass cancer Ā· feline angiosarcoma treatment Ā· signs of cat cancer

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Angiosarcomas are rare malignant mesenchymal neoplasms of endothelial cell origin with a predilection to the ventral abdominal wall in cats. Larger case series describing this entity are lacking. METHODS: Two referral centre laboratory databases were searched for angiosarcoma of the ventral abdominal wall. Nine cases with a histological diagnosis were included. Immunohistochemistry (factor VIII and PROX-1 antibodies) was used to phenotype them as haemangiosarcoma or lymphangiosarcoma. RESULTS: All cats presented with a ventral abdominal mass, five of which were producing a serosanguinous discharge. Eight underwent tumour staging and pulmonary metastases were suspected in one cat (but not histologically confirmed). With histopathology alone, a diagnosis of angiosarcoma and lymphangiosarcoma was made in four and five cases, respectively. After immunohistochemistry, five cases had a haemangiosarcoma phenotype and four had a lymphangiosarcoma phenotype, including two cases of lymphangiosarcoma that were reclassified as hemangiosarcoma. Eight cats received treatment (either surgery with or without adjuvant therapies or medical management alone). Six cats were euthanased due to local disease progression. The median survival time for haemangiosarcoma was 166 days (range 137-381), and for lymphangiosarcoma it was 197 days (range 67-208). Two cats with haemangiosarcoma remained alive for a follow-up period of 329 and 580 days, respectively. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Feline ventral abdominal angiosarcomas are rare locally aggressive neoplasms. While histology often provides a diagnosis of angiosarcoma, immunohistochemistry is ultimately required to differentiate between haemangiosarcoma and lymphangiosarcoma phenotypes. Further studies are required to evaluate whether the different phenotypes have an impact on treatment response and outcome.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38227337/