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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Aggressive histiocytoma tumor in a dog's ear canal

By Fernandez, Monica et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2020·Louisiana State University, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Invasive histiocytoma in the ear canal of a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

An 8-year-old male Rottweiler was brought in with a mass in his ear canal, which was diagnosed as a cutaneous histiocytoma (a type of skin tumor). Although these tumors usually have a good prognosis, this one was aggressive and had spread into the surrounding tissue. The vet performed surgery to remove the ear canal, but because the tumor was invasive, they also started chemotherapy with CCNU. While the dog did not show any signs of local tumor recurrence after treatment, he was later euthanized due to new abdominal masses that developed 250 days after surgery.

People also search for: Rottweiler ear canal tumor · cutaneous histiocytoma treatment · dog ear mass surgery · chemotherapy for dog tumors

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cutaneous histiocytomas (CH) are derived from epidermal Langerhans cells. Single CH are generally associated with a good prognosis in dogs because most undergo spontaneous remission. However, aggressive behaviour and lymph node metastasis have been reported in a small number of dogs with single CH. OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical presentation, treatment and disease progression of an aggressive CH located in the ear canal of a dog. ANIMAL: An 8-year-old intact male Rottweiler dog. METHODS AND MATERIALS: A unilateral ear canal mass was identified as a CH on routine haematoxylin and eosin stained samples. The diagnosis was confirmed by the demonstration of markers associated with Langerhans cells (Iba-1, E-cadherin and CD18) and the absence of markers associated with B cells (CD79a, CD20, Pax5), T cells (CD3), plasma cells (Mum-1) and macrophages (CD11d, CD204). RESULTS: A total ear canal ablation was performed, but tumour cells extended throughout the horizontal canal and to the deep surgical margin. Due to the locally invasive nature of the mass and incomplete excision, adjunctive chemotherapy with CCNU was pursued. No measurable local disease was appreciable at the time of the last treatment. At 250 days post-surgery the dog was euthanized owing to the development of multiple abdominal masses. No evidence of local tumour recurrence was noted. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Although single CH are typically associated with benign behaviour, the mass in this dog demonstrated locally invasive behaviour. Cutaneous histiocytomas in the ear canals of dogs may represent a particularly aggressive variant of the condition.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32249514/