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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Outcomes and prognosis for dogs with abdominal soft tissue sarcomas

By Linden, Dan et al.·Published in Veterinary and Comparative Oncology·2019·Department of Clinical Sciences for Matz, Auburn University College of Veterinary Medicine Auburn Alabama·View original on Crossref

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Original publication title: Outcomes and prognostic variables associated with primary abdominal visceral soft tissue sarcomas in dogs: A Veterinary Society of Surgical Oncology retrospective study

Species:
dog
Canine mammary tumorsStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 42 dogs diagnosed with rare abdominal tumors called soft tissue sarcomas (STSs) were studied to understand their outcomes and factors affecting survival. The most common type of tumor was leiomyosarcoma, often found in the spleen or small intestine. Dogs with grade III tumors had a much shorter survival time compared to those with lower-grade tumors, and 23.8% had metastasis (spread) at the time of surgery. The findings suggest that the grade of the tumor is important for predicting how long a dog might live after diagnosis, with higher-grade tumors linked to worse outcomes.

People also search for: dog abdominal tumor prognosis · soft tissue sarcoma in dogs · leiomyosarcoma treatment for dogs

Abstract

Primary abdominal visceral soft tissue sarcomas (STSs) are rare tumours in dogs with little information available on outcomes. The goal of this retrospective, multi‐institutional study was to describe the common tumour types, location and prognostic factors associated with primary abdominal visceral STSs. Medical records were searched for dogs with primary abdominal visceral STSs at six institutions and were retrospectively reviewed. Tumours were graded using the previously described grading scheme for STSs of the skin and subcutis when information in the histopathology report contained adequate details. Forty‐two dogs were included in the study. Five dogs had grade I tumours, 11 had grade II and 15 had grade III tumours. The most common tumour type was leiomyosarcoma (38.1%). The most common tumour locations were the spleen (47.6%) and small intestine (23.8%). The local recurrence rate was low (4.7%). Metastasis was present at the time of surgery in 23.8%, and the overall metastatic rate was 40.4%. Mitotic index of ≥9 was associated with significantly shorter survival time (MST 269 days) compared with a mitotic index of <9 (MST not reached). The MST for grade I STSs was not reached, was 589 days for grade II and 158 days for grade III. Dogs with grade III tumours were more likely to develop metastatic disease. Neither location of the primary tumour nor the histologic subtype was associated with survival time. Histologic grading of abdominal visceral STSs using the previously described scheme is prognostic and should be provided on histopathology reports.

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Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1111/vco.12456