PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Aggressive bone cancer with multiple tissue types in a young dog

By Hoenerhoff, M J et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2004·Department of Pathobiology and Diagnostic Investigation, United States·View original on PubMed

PetCaseFinder translated the abstract of this peer-reviewed paper into plain English so pet owners can read it. We do not publish original research — every detail traces back to the citation above. How we work →

Original publication title: Multipotential osteosarcoma with various mesenchymal differentiations in a young dog.

Species:
dog
OsteosarcomaMovement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A 1.5-year-old mixed-breed dog was diagnosed with a rare and aggressive bone cancer called multipotential osteosarcoma, which had spread to multiple areas including the lungs, liver, kidneys, and spleen. The dog showed no signs of a primary tumor but had tumors in the right tibia, right femur, left femur, and rib cage. This type of cancer is unusual because it can show different types of tissue growth, making it particularly complex. Unfortunately, due to the aggressive nature of the disease and its spread, the prognosis is generally poor for dogs with this condition.

People also search for: dog bone cancer symptoms · mixed-breed dog osteosarcoma treatment · young dog with cancer prognosis

Abstract

Apparently synchronous, aggressive, mixed mesenchymal tumors in the right tibia, right femur, left femur, and rib cage produced multiple microscopic metastases in the lungs and macroscopic metastases in the liver, kidney, and spleen in a 1.5-year-old, neutered male, mixed-breed dog. No primary soft tissue tumor mass was present. Microscopically, the neoplasm exhibited osteosarcomatous, chondrosarcomatous, liposarcomatous, leiomyosarcomatous, fibrosarcomatous, angiosarcomatous, and leukocytic differentiation and was diagnosed as a multipotential osteosarcoma with various mesenchymal differentiation. Immunohistochemically, the neoplasm was cytoplasmically immunoreactive for vimentin, osteonectin, osteocalcin, CD 18, CD 31, desmin, and muscle-specific actin. Oil Red O staining was positive within liposarcomatous areas. Skeletal metastases from a primary bone tumor are exceedingly rare in human and veterinary medicine. However, the history, clinical signs, location, microscopic and immunohistochemical features were similar to those described in aggressive, poorly differentiated osteosarcomas of children. In addition, the wide range of mesenchymal tissue differentiation of this neoplasm was unusual, and to the authors' knowledge, an osteosarcoma with this degree of multiple differentiation has not been previously reported in the dog.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15133175/