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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Slow-growing neck tumor surgery and chemo in four dogs

By Chan, Catherine M et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2016·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Primary nodal hemangiosarcoma in four dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Four dogs were found to have slow-growing masses in their necks, which turned out to be a rare type of cancer called hemangiosarcoma in their lymph nodes. None of the dogs showed any symptoms at the time of diagnosis, and imaging tests showed no signs of the cancer spreading. Each dog had surgery to remove the mass, followed by different types of chemotherapy. After treatment, three of the dogs lived for over a year, while one dog survived about 259 days. This case suggests that surgery and chemotherapy can help dogs with this rare cancer live longer.

People also search for: dog neck mass treatment · hemangiosarcoma in dogs · dog cancer survival rates · lymph node cancer in dogs

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION 4 dogs with a slow-growing mass in the cervical region were evaluated. CLINICAL FINDINGS All dogs had no clinical signs at the time of the evaluation. There was no apparent evidence of visceral metastases or other primary tumor based on available CT or MRI data for any dog. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME For each dog, surgery to remove the mass was performed. Histologic examination of the excised tissue revealed a completely excised grade 1 or 2 lymph node hemangiosarcoma. All dogs received adjuvant chemotherapy; 2 dogs underwent curative intent chemotherapy, 1 dog underwent metronomic treatment with cyclophosphamide, and 1 dog underwent metronomic treatment with chlorambucil. The survival time was 259 days in 1 dog; 3 dogs were still alive 615, 399, and 365 days after surgery. CLINICAL RELEVANCE Primary nodal hemangiosarcoma in dogs is a rare and, to the authors' knowledge, previously undescribed disease that appears to develop in the cervical lymph nodes as a slow-growing mass or masses. Surgical excision and adjunct treatment resulted in long survival times for 3 of the 4 dogs of the present report. Given the aggressive biologic behavior of hemangiosarcomas in other body locations, adjunct chemotherapy should be considered for affected dogs, although its role in the cases described in this report was unclear. Additional clinical information is required to further characterize the biologic behavior of this tumor type and determine the expected survival times and associated risk factors in dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27767434/