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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Multiple painful skin lumps in young Great Dane

By Mastrorilli, Cinzia et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2012·Department of Pathobiology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Multifocal cutaneous histiocytic sarcoma in a young dog and review of histiocytic cell immunophenotyping.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 9-month-old male Great Dane was brought in with over 100 painful, raised nodules on his skin that had been getting worse for several months. Tests revealed that these nodules were caused by a type of cancer called histiocytic sarcoma, which affects certain immune cells in the skin. Unfortunately, treatment with two chemotherapy drugs, lomustine and doxorubicin, did not stop the cancer from spreading, and the dog passed away three months after diagnosis. The cancer was primarily in the skin, with only one lymph node showing signs of the disease at the time of death.

People also search for: Great Dane skin lumps · dog histiocytic sarcoma treatment · young dog with skin cancer

Abstract

A 9-month-old male Great Dane had progressive generalized nodular dermatopathy for several months. There were > 100 raised, alopecic, firm, painful nodules throughout the skin. Aspirates from several lesions yielded moderate numbers of irregularly round or polygonal to spindle-shaped cells with mild to moderate anisocytosis and few inflammatory cells, and the cytologic interpretation was proliferation of mesenchymal or histiocytic cells. On histopathologic examination, nodules were composed of densely packed sheets of round to spindle-shaped cells with mild anisokaryosis and low mitotic activity. Multifocal histiocytic sarcoma with a spindle-cell pattern was diagnosed based on morphologic features and intense expression of CD18. Additional immunophenotypic analysis on frozen sections of tissue confirmed the diagnosis of histiocytic sarcoma; expression of CD18, CD45, CD1a, CD11b, and CD11c, limited expression of Thy-1 (CD90) and CD80, and lack of expression of CD4, CD11d, and CD86 indicated that the cells were likely interstitial dendritic cells; a review of reactive and neoplastic dendritic cells is provided. Based on staging, internal organs were not affected. Sequential treatment with lomustine and doxorubicin failed to prevent progression of the cutaneous lesions, and the dog died 3 months after initial diagnosis. At necropsy, a focus of neoplastic cells was present in one lymph node, but except for skin other organs were not involved. The clinical presentation of histiocytic sarcoma may be unusual, and neoplastic cells may lack overt features of malignancy on cytologic and histopathologic examination. In some instances, immunophenotyping is required to differentiate histiocytic sarcoma from other histiocytic disorders.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22747712/