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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Malignant anal sac melanoma in dogs with bloody discharge and licking

By Vinayak, A et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2017·Veterinary Teaching Hospital, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Malignant anal sac melanoma in dogs: eleven cases (2000 to 2015).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 11 dogs with malignant anal sac melanoma (a type of cancer) showed symptoms like bloody discharge from the anal sacs and excessive licking around the rear. Most of these dogs underwent surgery, while others received chemotherapy or pain management. Unfortunately, despite treatment, the survival times were short, with only one dog living beyond a year after diagnosis. The study highlights the need for early detection and treatment to potentially improve outcomes for dogs with this serious condition.

People also search for: dog anal sac melanoma symptoms · treatment for dog anal sac cancer · dog bloody anal discharge · dog cancer survival rates

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To report the signalment, clinical presentation, treatments pursued and outcomes of dogs with malignant anal sac melanoma. METHODS: Medical records from five institutions from January 2000 through December 2015 were reviewed and dogs with cytologically- or histologically-confirmed malignant anal sac melanoma were identified. Signalment, clinical signs, staging, cytology, histopathologic analysis, surgical and non-surgical treatments were extracted from the medical records. The referring veterinarians and owners were contacted for follow-up data. RESULTS: Eleven dogs were included and survival data was available for all. The most common clinical signs were bloody anal sac discharge and perianal licking. Initial treatments pursued included surgery (n=8), chemotherapy (n=1), and palliative treatment with pain medications and stool softeners (n=2). In an adjuvant setting, melanoma vaccine was pursued following surgery in three dogs and chemotherapy in one dog. Regardless of treatment, progression-free survival (mean 92 · 5 days) and overall survival times (median 107 days) were short. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Dogs in this case series had a guarded to poor prognosis regardless of treatment. Ten of 11 dogs were euthanased due to local or distant disease progression. Only 1 of 11 dogs was alive one year after diagnosis. An understanding of tumour behaviour in this location could lead to improved survival times with earlier diagnosis and treatment.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28276118/