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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat with metastatic angioinvasive lymphoma in right rear leg

By Rogers, Douglas G & Aliano, Valerie A·Published in Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc·2009·Veterinary Diagnostic Center, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Metastatic angioinvasive lymphoma (lymphomatoid granulomatosis) in a cat.

Species:
cat
LymphomaStomach & digestionCats

Plain-English summary

A 17-year-old spayed female Domestic Shorthair cat had a lump on her right back leg that was found to be angioinvasive lymphoma, a type of cancer that can invade blood vessels. Despite treatment, the mass returned, and her health declined, leading to her being euthanized two months later. A necropsy revealed that the cancer had spread to nearby muscles, lymph nodes, liver, and spleen. This case is notable because the lymphoma affected the skin, which is not typical for this type of cancer.

People also search for: cat lump on leg · angioinvasive lymphoma in cats · cat cancer treatment options · why is my cat losing weight · cat euthanasia decision

Abstract

A subcutaneous mass removed from the right rear leg of a 17-year-old, spayed, female Domestic Shorthair cat was characterized histopathologically by granulomatous inflammation, sheets of large atypical lymphoid cells, and necrosis. The walls of the small and medium caliber blood vessels were invaded transmurally by atypical lymphoid cells. A diagnosis of angioinvasive lymphoma (AIL), or lymphomatoid granulomatosis, was made based on histopathologic findings. The cat was euthanized 2 months later because of recurrence of the mass and elevated serum alanine aminotransferase activity, and a necropsy was performed. The histopathologic lesion of AIL was seen in the skin and subcutis of the right rear leg, and neoplastic cell infiltrates were seen in adjacent skeletal muscle, right superficial inguinal lymph node, liver, and spleen. By immunohistochemistry, variable numbers of neoplastic cells expressed B-lymphocyte antigen 36 (BLA36) or cluster of differentiation (CD)3 markers, indicative of B- and T-cell lineages, respectively. Neoplastic cells were uniformly positive for vimentin and uniformly negative for cytokeratins and myeloid/histiocytic antigen. Although the cat had received a Rabies virus vaccine subcutaneously in the right rear leg 6 months earlier, the AIL lesion was not typical of vaccine-induced sarcomas. The AIL in this cat was unusual because the extrapulmonary metastases involved the skin and subcutis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19407098/