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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Testicular lesions in cats - types and changes seen under microscope

By Fraser I. Hill et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2024·View original on Semantic Scholar

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Original publication title: Histopathological changes in testicular lesions in cats

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of 18 cats in Hong Kong had testicular issues, with many showing signs of inflammation or other non-cancerous conditions. Most of the cats were young, but three older cats had testicular cancer, including types that had not been previously reported in cats. The common problems included inflammation, undescended testicles, and cysts. The findings highlight the importance of checking for both non-cancerous and cancerous testicular issues in cats, especially as they age.

People also search for: cat testicular cancer symptoms · why is my cat's testicle swollen · cat inflammation treatment · undescended testicle in cats

Abstract

Objectives The aim of this retrospective study was to describe the neoplastic and non-neoplastic lesions seen on histopathological examination of cat testes in Hong Kong between 2018 and 2024. Methods A total of 26 single or dual testes samples were collected from 18 cats by veterinarians at 14 veterinary clinics and submitted for histopathological examination. Laboratory records, including signalment, lesion location, age, breed and histopathological findings, were reviewed for each cat. Results Neoplastic testicular lesions were seen in three older cats (median age 8.5 years; range 3–17) compared with 18 non-neoplastic lesions in 15 cats (median age 1 year; range 0.5–3). The most common non-neoplastic lesions included inflammation (in the testes, epididymis, tunics and ductus deferens), cryptorchidism, and one case each of polyorchidism and epididymal cyst formation. Two of the testes with inflammation were identified on immunohistochemical staining as feline coronavirus-infected and one pair of testes was associated with the presence of extracellular Gram-negative bacteria at the lesion site. Three different neoplastic lesions were identified, one each of Sertoli cell tumour, leiomyoma and fibrosarcoma. Conclusions and relevance Non-neoplastic testicular lesions were most common, including inflammation, cryptorchidism, polyorchidism and epididymal cysts. To our knowledge, leiomyoma and fibrosarcoma have not been reported in cat testes before and represent important differential diagnoses for testicular lesions. Plain language summary Most of the testicles examined from castrated cats because of disease noted by the owner had evidence of inflammation. Others were poorly developed because they had not descended correctly into the scrotum. Three cases of testicular cancer were noted and two of the types of cancer had not been reported in cats before but have been seen in humans.

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Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/39286932