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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Incidental mammary tumors in female dogs are less often cancerous

By Murphy, Casey B et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2023·1Department of Surgery·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Incidentally diagnosed mammary gland tumors are less likely to be malignant than nonincidental mammary gland tumors.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 96 female dogs had mammary gland tumors removed, with some tumors found incidentally during exams for other issues. The study found that 93% of these incidental tumors were benign, while 30% of tumors that were the main reason for the vet visit were malignant. This means that if a tumor is found incidentally, it is much less likely to be cancerous. Smaller tumors and those in smaller dogs were less likely to be malignant, suggesting a good prognosis after removal.

People also search for: dog mammary tumor benign vs malignant · what to do if my dog has a mammary tumor · dog tumor removal recovery time

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare malignancy rates of canine mammary gland tumors diagnosed incidentally and nonincidentally. ANIMALS: 96 female dogs from which mammary gland tumors were removed. METHODS: Medical records of all female dogs from which mammary gland tumors were removed at a privately owned referral institution between 2018 and 2021 were reviewed. Data were obtained on signalment for each dog, histopathologic results for each tumor, and the primary reason for each dog's presentation to the hospital. The proportion of malignant tumors was compared between dogs that were presented with nonincidental MGTs and dogs that were presented for a different primary condition and had incidental MGTs found on examination. RESULTS: A total of 195 tumors were removed from the 96 dogs in this study. In dogs with incidental MGTs, 82 of 88 (93%) tumors were benign and 6 of 88 (7%) were malignant. In dogs with nonincidental MGTs, 75 of 107 (70%) tumors were benign and 32 of 107 (30%) were malignant. Nonincidental MGTs were significantly (OR, 5.83; 95% CI, 2.31 to 14.73; P = .001) more likely to be malignant compared with incidental MGTs. Dogs with nonincidental MGTs were 6.84 times as likely to have a malignant MGT removed compared with dogs with incidental MGTs (OR, 6.84; 95% CI, 2.47 to 18.94; P < .001). The likelihood of malignancy increased by 5% for each 1-kg increase in body weight (OR, 1.05; 95% CI, 1.01 to 1.09; P = .013). Larger tumors were more likely to be malignant than smaller tumors (P = .001). CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Most incidentally diagnosed MGTs are benign and allow for a good prognosis after excision. Small dogs and dogs with MGTs < 3 cm in diameter are the least likely to have a malignancy.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37400074/