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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Radiation therapy for nasal melanoma in three dogs

By Davies, Owen et al.·Published in The veterinary quarterly·2017·a Queen Mother Hospital for Animals, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Intranasal melanoma treated with radiation therapy in three dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Three dogs with ongoing nasal discharge were diagnosed with intranasal melanoma, a type of cancer affecting the nose. A 14-year-old crossbreed, a 5-year-old German Shepherd, and a 9-year-old Beagle were treated with radiation therapy. The treatment was successful, with the first two dogs showing complete remission on follow-up scans, while the Beagle's condition remained stable for several months. Unfortunately, the German Shepherd developed seizures and was euthanized, while the Beagle was lost to follow-up. Overall, radiation therapy proved to be an effective local treatment for this rare nasal cancer in dogs.

People also search for: dog nasal discharge treatment · melanoma in dogs · dog radiation therapy for cancer · Beagle nasal cancer symptoms · German Shepherd seizures after cancer treatment

Abstract

Three dogs were investigated for chronic unilateral nasal discharge. In all cases CT imaging showed an intranasal mass causing turbinate lysis and no evidence of metastasis. Cytology in cases 1 (a 14-year-old neutered male crossbreed dog) and 2 (a five-year-old neutered male German Shepherd dog) demonstrated a pleomorphic cell population with variable intracellular pigment suspicious of melanocytic neoplasia. Histopathology with immunohistochemistry (Melan-A and vimentin, plus PNL-2 in one case) confirmed the diagnosis of melanoma in all dogs. All dogs were treated with megavoltage radiotherapy using linear accelerators. Cases 1 and 3 (a nine-year-old neutered female beagle dog) received a hypofractionated (4 × 8 Gy) protocol and case 2 received a definitive (12 × 4 Gy) protocol. Complete remission was demonstrated on repeat CT scan five months after diagnosis in case 1 and seven months in case 2. Stable disease was documented on CT at four months for case 3; however, clinical signs in this dog remained controlled for 10 months in total. Case 1 died of unrelated causes five months after diagnosis, case 2 was euthanased due to the development of seizures 13 months after diagnosis, and case 3 was lost to follow-up 12 months after diagnosis. Melanoma should be considered as a rare differential diagnosis for primary nasal neoplasia in the dog and radiation therapy can be used as effective local therapy.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28982291/