Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with invasive spindle-cell muscle tumor causing bone loss and leg
By Junchao Shi et al.·Published in Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation·2023·View original on Semantic Scholar →
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Original publication title: Invasive spindle-cell rhabdomyosarcoma with osteolysis in a dog: case report and literature review
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 3.5-year-old female Bulldog was brought in with a large mass in her left hind leg, which was causing a pathologic fracture. The vet suspected a type of bone cancer called osteosarcoma and decided to amputate the leg. After surgery, tests revealed that the mass was actually a rare type of cancer called invasive spindle-cell rhabdomyosarcoma. Thankfully, 18 months after the surgery, the dog was doing well with no signs of the cancer returning.
People also search for: Bulldog leg mass · dog bone cancer symptoms · rhabdomyosarcoma treatment in dogs
Abstract
Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS), a malignant mesenchymal neoplasm derived from skeletal muscle, is relatively rare in both human and veterinary medicine. Here we report an unusual case of invasive spindle-cell RMS (SCRMS) with bone infiltration and pathologic fracture in a 3.5-y-old intact female Bulldog. Radiographically, a large, predominantly osteolytic mass in the tibia and fibula of the left hindlimb had features typical of a malignant primary bone tumor. Clinically, osteosarcoma was suspected, and the leg was amputated. Histologically, the mass was composed of loosely interwoven spindle-cell fascicles; tumor cells were fusiform with cigar-shaped nuclei and abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm. The neoplastic cells were strongly immunopositive for vimentin, muscle-specific actin, desmin, myogenin, and myoD1. Invasive SCRMS with osteolysis was diagnosed based on the histologic examination and immunohistochemical (IHC) stains. The dog was alive without any evidence of local recurrence or distant metastasis 18 mo post-surgery. RMS should be included in the differential diagnosis when osteolysis occurs; IHC staining confirmation is of great value for definitive diagnosis and treatment planning.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/36600502