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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Medical treatment for gastrinoma causing vomiting in a cat

By Michael B Lane et al.·Published in JFMS open reports·2016·View original on Semantic Scholar

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Original publication title: Medical management of gastrinoma in a cat

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 7-year-old male domestic short-haired cat was brought to the vet after experiencing intermittent vomiting, drooling, lethargy, and weight loss for four weeks. Tests showed liver issues and multiple masses in the liver, leading to a diagnosis of gastrinoma, a type of tumor that affects hormone production. Despite initial treatment at home, the cat's condition worsened, requiring hospitalization where it received fluids and medications. After starting a combination of omeprazole, octreotide, and toceranib, the cat's gastric ulcer healed within eight weeks, and it experienced relief from symptoms for about five months.

People also search for: cat vomiting and weight loss · gastrinoma treatment in cats · cat stomach ulcer medication

Abstract

Case summary A 7-year-old male castrated domestic short-haired cat was evaluated for a 4 week history of intermittent vomiting, ptyalism, lethargy and weight loss. Serum biochemistry revealed mild mixed hepatopathy. Abdominal ultrasonography identified multiple heterogeneous hepatic masses and a linear, hyperechoic focus with associated reverberation artifact in the wall of the stomach consistent with a gastric ulcer. Serum gastrin concentrations were markedly increased. Cytologic interpretation of a fine-needle aspirate of the hepatic masses was consistent with neuroendocrine neoplasia, and a diagnosis of gastrinoma was established. Deterioration of the cat’s condition, despite at-home acid-suppressant therapy, led to hospitalization. The cat was initially stabilized with intravenous crystalloid fluid therapy, maropitant, pantoprazole and octreotide. A continuous radiotelemetric intragastric pH monitoring system was used to monitor the response of intragastric pH to therapy. Long-term therapy was continued with omeprazole (orally q12h), octreotide (subcutaneously q8h) and thrice-weekly toceranib administered orally. Toceranib therapy led to gastrointestinal upset and was discontinued. Gastric ulceration resolved within 8 weeks, and palliation of clinical signs was achieved for approximately 5 months. Relevance and novel information Including this report, only six cases of feline gastrinoma have been reported in the veterinary literature. Little is known regarding non-surgical therapy, and octreotide has not been previously reported for medical management of feline gastrinoma. Results of intragastric pH monitoring and clinical improvement suggest that medical therapy using octreotide and proton pump inhibitors represents a novel therapeutic option for cats with gastrinoma where surgical excision is not feasible.

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Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/28491421