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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How to confirm oral malignant melanoma in cats with lab tests

By Saverino, Kelly M et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2021·304302MedVet, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Immunohistochemical evaluation of suspected oral malignant melanoma in cats.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of cats with suspected oral malignant melanoma (a type of cancer in the mouth) were evaluated to see if they truly had this condition. Out of 22 cases, only 2 were confirmed as oral malignant melanoma through special testing, while others were found to have different types of tumors. Unfortunately, the overall outlook for these cats was not good, with most living less than three months after diagnosis. However, those that received treatments like surgery or radiation therapy had a better chance of surviving longer than 100 days.

People also search for: cat oral cancer symptoms · feline melanoma treatment · cat mouth tumor prognosis

Abstract

Oral malignant melanoma (OMM) is considered the third most common oral malignant neoplasm in cats, but its variable morphology and frequent lack of melanin pigment make it a diagnostic challenge. Twenty-two cases of cats with malignant oral neoplasms that were diagnosed as OMM or listed OMM as a suspected differential diagnosis on the biopsy report were examined using an immunohistochemistry (IHC) panel for S100, melan-A, PNL2, laminin, CD34, and pan-cytokeratin. Although OMM was suspected (= 14) or previously diagnosed (= 8), only 2 cases were immunohistochemically confirmed as OMM. Seven cases were classified as soft tissue sarcoma based on positive expression of CD34 or laminin, and one was classified as carcinoma based on positive expression of pan-cytokeratin. The majority of cases (= 12) were categorized as unclassified malignant neoplasms because they did not express melan-A, PNL2, laminin, CD34, or pan-cytokeratin; however, a proportion of these did express S100 (= 7). Long-term prognosis of all 22 cats was poor, with a median survival time of 87 days (range = 2-249 days). Cases with longer survival times (>100 days) were treated with surgery, radiation therapy, or a combination. For feline oral malignant neoplasms thought to be OMM, routine use of IHC is required for an accurate diagnosis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34190003/