Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
High-grade round cell liposarcoma tumor in a Basset hound dog
By Plumlee, Q D et al.·Published in Journal of comparative pathology·2016·Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: High-Grade Myxoid Liposarcoma (Round Cell Variant) in a Dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 10-year-old neutered male Basset hound was found to have a large mass on his left side, which was confirmed through imaging not to be spreading into his abdomen. A closer examination of the mass revealed it was a type of cancer called high-grade myxoid liposarcoma, which is rare in dogs. The tumor had both spindle-shaped and round cells, and it was causing some unusual changes in the tissue. This case suggests that the classification of liposarcomas in dogs may need to be updated to better reflect what veterinarians are seeing.
People also search for: dog abdominal mass treatment · Basset hound cancer symptoms · high-grade liposarcoma in dogs
Abstract
A 10-year-old, neutered male, Basset hound had a 26 × 21 × 21 cm infiltrative mass on the left abdominal wall that did not extend into the peritoneal cavity based on radiographs and abdominal computed tomography. Cytological examination revealed moderate numbers of neoplastic round cells, which frequently contained numerous round, clear, cytoplasmic vacuoles. Histologically, the tumour was composed of two morphologically distinct cell populations forming a continuum of heterogeneously differentiated cells. The primary spindle-shaped population formed streams with abundant, lightly eosinophilic, alcian blue-positive, myxoid matrix. The second population was arranged in sheets and had a round cell appearance. Scattered within both populations were neoplastic cells containing variably sized, intracytoplasmic, osmium tetroxide-positive vacuoles (lipid). Multifocal large pools of mucin formed pseudocysts, and numerous small capillaries were present throughout the neoplasm. According to the current World Health Organization veterinary classification of liposarcomas, this neoplasm had morphological features of both the myxoid and pleomorphic variants of liposarcoma; however, it was analogous to the recently defined high-grade myxoid liposarcoma in man. Myxoid liposarcoma with round cells has not been described previously in dogs. This case highlights the need to potentially re-evaluate the current classification of liposarcomas in animals.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27665042/