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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Outcome after treatment of gastrointestinal mast cell tumors in cats

By Barrett, L E et al.·Published in Veterinary and comparative oncology·2018·Department of Clinical Studies, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Outcome following treatment of feline gastrointestinal mast cell tumours.

Species:
cat
Stomach & digestionCats

Plain-English summary

A 12-year-old cat diagnosed with gastrointestinal mast cell tumors was treated with various methods, including chemotherapy and surgery. The most common chemotherapy drugs used were lomustine and chlorambucil. The study found that some cats lived longer than expected, with an average survival time of about 1.5 years. Interestingly, 26% of the cats that passed away did so from unrelated causes, suggesting that the prognosis might be better than previously thought. Both surgical and medical treatments, including the use of prednisolone, helped extend survival times.

People also search for: cat gastrointestinal tumors treatment · feline mast cell tumor prognosis · chemotherapy for cat cancer · prednisolone for cats with tumors

Abstract

Prognosis of feline gastrointestinal mast cell tumours (FGIMCT), based on limited available literature, is described as guarded to poor, which may influence treatment recommendations and patient outcome. The purpose of this study is to describe the clinical findings, treatment response, and outcome of FGIMCT. Medical records of 31 cats diagnosed with and treated for FGIMCT were retrospectively reviewed. Data collected included signalment, method of diagnosis, tumour location (including metastatic sites), treatment type, cause of death and survival time. Mean age was 12.9 y. Diagnosis was made via cytology (n = 15), histopathology (n = 13) or both (n = 3). Metastatic sites included abdominal lymph node (n = 10), abdominal viscera (n = 4) and both (n = 2). Therapeutic approaches included chemotherapy alone (n = 15), surgery and chemotherapy (n = 7), glucocorticoid only (n = 6) and surgery and glucocorticoid (n = 3). Lomustine (n = 15) and chlorambucil (n = 12) were the most commonly used chemotherapy drugs. Overall median survival time was 531 d (95% confidence interval 334, 982). Gastrointestinal location, diagnosis of additional cancers, and treatment type did not significantly affect survival time. Cause of death was tumour-related or unknown (n = 12) and unrelated (n = 8) in the 20 cats dead at the time of analysis. The prognosis for cats with FGIMCT may be better than previously reported, with 26% of cats deceased from an unrelated cause. Surgical and medical treatments (including prednisolone alone) were both associated with prolonged survival times. Treatment other than prednisolone may not be necessary in some cats. Continued research into prognostic factors and most effective treatment strategies are needed.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28560846/