Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Histiocytic sarcoma diagnosed in 14 miniature schnauzers and breed
By Lenz, J A et al.Ā·Published in The Journal of small animal practiceĀ·2017Ā·Department of Clinical Sciences, United StatesĀ·View original on PubMed ā
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Original publication title: Histiocytic sarcoma in 14 miniature schnauzers - a new breed predisposition?
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
Fourteen miniature schnauzers were diagnosed with histiocytic sarcoma, a type of cancer, during a study period, suggesting that this breed may be more prone to this disease. Most of these dogs had localized tumors in the lungs, while a few had tumors in the stomach with spread to lymph nodes. Treatment varied among the dogs, but many had a serious progression of the disease. The findings indicate that there may be an inherited risk factor for histiocytic sarcoma in miniature schnauzers, which hasn't been recognized before.
People also search for: miniature schnauzer cancer symptoms Ā· histiocytic sarcoma treatment for dogs Ā· dog lung tumor prognosis
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To describe a series of miniature schnauzers diagnosed with histiocytic sarcoma and assess for possible breed predisposition. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Medical records of miniature schnauzers with a diagnosis of histiocytic sarcoma between January 2008 and April 2015 were reviewed. Data collected included signalment, body weight, presenting complaint, date of diagnosis, clinicopathologic and diagnostic imaging findings, treatment, therapeutic response, date of death or last follow-up and necropsy findings. Breed predisposition was assessed with odds ratios, using breed-matched dogs without histiocytic sarcoma admitted during the study period as controls. Pedigree analysis was performed for dogs with available registration information. RESULTS: Fourteen miniature schnauzers were diagnosed with histiocytic sarcoma during the study period, making them over-represented among the hospital population (odds ratio=4·8, P=0·0009). Disease was considered localised in ten dogs and disseminated in four. Of the dogs with localised disease, nine were diagnosed with primary pulmonary histiocytic sarcoma based on the presence of a large pulmonary mass with (n=7) or without (n=2) evidence of intra-thoracic metastasis, and one had gastric histiocytic sarcoma with nodal metastasis. Treatments varied, but an aggressive clinical course was found in most patients. Pedigree analysis revealed a recent common ancestor for a subset of the dogs assessed. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Miniature schnauzers were over-represented among dogs with histiocytic sarcoma in this patient population. Pedigree analysis supports an inherited risk factor, which has not previously been suggested in the breed. Primary pulmonary involvement with or without intra-thoracic metastasis was common in this cohort.
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Search related cases āOriginal publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28543363/