Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How well do splenic mass scores predict cancer in dogs
By Hillier, Townes N et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2024·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Improved predictability is needed for calculators used to preoperatively determine the etiology of splenic masses in dogs: an external validation study of the HeLP score and T-STAT.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 261 dogs with splenic masses underwent surgery to remove their spleens, and researchers evaluated two scoring systems to predict whether these masses were cancerous. The HeLP score showed reasonable accuracy, identifying hemangiosarcoma (a type of cancer) in about 62% of the cases, while the T-STAT score was less reliable, correctly identifying malignant lesions only about 48% of the time. Both scoring systems need improvement to better predict cancer presence before surgery.
People also search for: dog splenic mass diagnosis · hemangiosarcoma in dogs · splenic tumor treatment options
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the predictability of the hemangiosarcoma likelihood prediction (HeLP) score and the Tufts Splenic Tumor Assessment Tool (T-STAT) for hemangiosarcoma and malignancy, respectively. ANIMALS: 261 dogs undergoing splenectomy for a splenic mass. METHODS: Medical records were retrospectively reviewed; variables for the HeLP score and T-STAT were collected, and scores were assigned. Area under the curve (AUC) was calculated for each score. RESULTS: The HeLP score included 141 dogs; hemangiosarcoma was diagnosed in 87 (61.7%) dogs. The median cumulative HeLP score was 51 (range, 17 to 82; IQR, 39 to 58) for dogs with hemangiosarcoma and 28 (range, 0 to 70; IQR, 17 to 41) for dogs without hemangiosarcoma. The categorical HeLP score was low (28; 32.2%), medium (31; 35.6%), and high (28; 32.2%) for dogs with hemangiosarcoma and was low (41; 75.9%), medium (9; 16.7%), and high (4; 7.4%) for dogs without hemangiosarcoma. The AUC of the cumulative and categorical HeLP scores for diagnosis of hemangiosarcoma were 0.79 (95% CI, 0.71 to 0.86) and 0.73 (95% CI, 0.65 to 0.82), respectively. The T-STAT included 181 dogs. Lesions were benign in 95 (52.5%) and malignant in 86 (47.5%) dogs. The median T-STAT score was 62% (range, 5% to 98%; IQR, 36% to 77%) for dogs with malignant lesions and 38% (range, 5% to 91%; IQR, 24% to 59%) for dogs with benign lesions. The T-STAT had an AUC of 0.68 (0.60 to 0.76) for diagnosis of malignancy. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The HeLP score had acceptable performance, and the T-STAT had poor performance for diagnosis prediction. A tool with excellent or outstanding discrimination is needed to more reliably predict the presence of hemangiosarcoma or a malignant lesion preoperatively.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38626799/