Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Primary bone marrow T-cell lymphoma in a female Golden Retriever
By Pinard, Christopher J et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2021·Department of Clinical Studies, Canada·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Primary bone marrow T-cell lymphoma in a Golden Retriever.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 6-year-old female Golden Retriever was brought in for routine blood work before a surgery, which revealed low blood cell counts and high calcium levels. Further tests showed she had a type of cancer called T-cell lymphoma affecting her bone marrow. She started a chemotherapy treatment that worked for a while, but unfortunately, she relapsed multiple times over the next year. Eventually, she was given palliative care with prednisone to keep her comfortable until she passed away 16 months after her diagnosis.
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Abstract
A 6.2-year-old 28-kg (61.7 lb) intact female Golden Retriever was referred due to persistent and multiple cytopenias noted on a routine CBC prior to a mature ovariohysterectomy procedure. The patient's physical examination was unremarkable, and staging of the thorax and abdomen identified no abnormalities. At the referral hospital, moderate hypercalcemia, borderline anemia, and neutropenia were noted. Assessment of bone marrow samples by cytology, histology, immunohistochemistry, and flow cytometry indicated a T-cell neoplasm. The patient was treated with a multi-agent chemotherapy protocol for 6 months, which induced remission. Nine months after diagnosis, she relapsed with recurrence of hypercalcemia, cytopenias, and clinical illness. Single-agent anthracycline (mitoxantrone) in combination with prednisone therapy was initiated for 3 months. Two months after completion, the patient relapsed again, and palliative therapy with prednisone was elected. The patient was euthanized 16 months after diagnosis due to progressive disease. Post-mortem histopathologic evaluation showed extensive replacement of bone marrow by neoplastic cells, and infiltrates in multiple organs. The neoplasm was diagnosed as lymphoma rather than leukemia due to the lack of abnormal circulating cells throughout the course of disease. The neoplasm was detected only in marrow at the time of initial diagnosis, and the marrow was the most extensively effaced organ at the time of death. Therefore, leukemia or stage V lymphoma was considered unlikely. In patients with a cytopenia and lack of neoplastic leukocytosis or solid tissue masses, primary bone marrow lymphoma should be considered among the differential diagnoses.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33759213/