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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Gallbladder carcinoid in a cat.

Journal:
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne
Year:
2024
Authors:
Shaw, Tania
Affiliation:
Surgery Department · Australia

Plain-English summary

This case report discusses a domestic longhair cat diagnosed with a rare tumor called a gallbladder carcinoid, which comes from special cells in the neuroendocrine system. The cat showed nonspecific signs, and while imaging tests were done, they didn't provide clear answers. After surgery and additional chemotherapy treatment, the cat unfortunately developed metastasis, meaning the cancer spread, just seven months later. Overall, the cat lived for only ten months after the diagnosis, indicating a poor outlook for this type of tumor.

Abstract

Carcinoids are rare tumors that originate from neuroendocrine system cells. There has apparently only been 1 report in the veterinary medical literature of a cat with a gallbladder carcinoid, with no long-term follow-up information available from that case. Furthermore, apparently only 9 dogs with gallbladder carcinoids have been reported, again with no long-term follow-up. This case report describes the clinical presentation, surgical appearance, histopathologic and immunohistochemical findings, postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy treatment, and long-term outcome of a domestic longhair cat with a gallbladder carcinoid. The diagnosis of a gallbladder carcinoid in the present case was based on histologic and immunohistochemical findings. Clinical signs of a gallbladder carcinoid are nonspecific and ultrasonographic findings may not be definitive; however, it should be considered as a potential differential diagnosis in cats with lesions of the gallbladder or in the region of the gallbladder. The prognosis is poor, with a potentially high metastatic rate. In the present case, metastasis occurred 7 mo postoperatively despite adjuvant therapy, and the survival time was only 10 mo from the time of diagnosis. Key clinical message: This case report describes the clinical presentation, surgical appearance, histopathologic and immunohistochemical findings, postoperative adjuvant treatment, and long-term outcome of a cat with a gallbladder carcinoid, which should be considered as a potential differential diagnosis in cats with lesions of the gallbladder or in the region of the gallbladder.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38434157/