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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Survival and treatment outcomes for dogs with high-grade stage 2 mast

By Burge, Rhonda et al.·Published in Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association·2023·From the Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences (R.B.), United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: High-Grade, Stage 2 Mast Cell Tumors: Outcome in Dogs With Local and Systemic Therapy.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 17 dogs with high-grade, stage 2 mast cell tumors (a type of skin cancer) underwent surgery and sometimes radiation and chemotherapy. On average, these dogs lived about 8.5 months after treatment. Unfortunately, dogs with ulcerated tumors, those that had recurred, or tumors located on the head tended to have shorter survival times despite receiving aggressive treatment. This study highlights the challenges in predicting outcomes for dogs with this type of cancer and suggests that certain factors can affect survival.

People also search for: dog mast cell tumor treatment · high-grade mast cell tumor prognosis · dog skin cancer survival time

Abstract

Canine mast cell tumors (MCTs) have highly variable clinical behavior, and predicting outcomes in individual dogs remains challenging. Many studies combine dogs with varying tumor grades, clinical stage, or treatments, confounding those results. The purpose of this retrospective study was to determine outcome and prognostic factors in a specific subset of dogs with high-grade, stage 2, cutaneous MCTs treated with adequate local control via surgery with or without radiation therapy and adjuvant cytotoxic chemotherapy. Seventeen dogs met the inclusion criteria, and the median survival time was 259 days. Development of local recurrence, tumor location, and presence of ulceration were all associated with shorter survival times. Tumor size, mitotic count, chemotherapy protocol, lymph node classification, and radiation therapy were not significantly associated with outcome. In this study, a specific population of dogs characterized by high-grade MCTs with local lymph node metastasis who received aggressive local and systemic therapy had a median survival of about 8.5 mo. Dogs with ulcerated tumors, recurrent tumors, or tumors located on the head had a worse outcome despite aggressive therapy. These results may serve as a basis of comparison for future research exploring alternative treatment combinations in this specific population of dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37432790/