Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Prognostic tumor features in brain gliomas of dogs
By Merickel, Joshua L et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2021·University of Minnesota Twin Cities, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Prognostic histopathologic features of canine glial tumors.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with brain tumors called gliomas were treated with surgery and immunotherapy to see how different tumor types affected their survival. The study found that dogs with astrocytic tumors lived longer than those with other types, and those with low-grade tumors had better outcomes than those with high-grade tumors. Specific features of the tumors, like low mitotic counts (how fast the tumor cells are dividing), were linked to longer survival. This information can help veterinarians provide better prognoses for dogs diagnosed with gliomas.
People also search for: dog brain tumor prognosis · glioma treatment for dogs · what is an astrocytic tumor in dogs
Abstract
Gliomas are relatively common tumors in aged dogs (especially brachycephalic breeds), and the dog is proving to be useful as a translational model for humans with brain tumors. Hitherto, there is relatively little prognostic data for canine gliomas and none on outcome related to specific histological features. Histologic sections of tumor biopsies from 33 dogs with glioma treated with surgical resection and immunotherapy and 21 whole brains obtained postmortem were reviewed. Tumors were diagnosed as astrocytic, oligodendroglial, or undefined glioma using Comparative Brain Tumor Consortium criteria. Putative features of malignancy were evaluated, namely, mitotic counts, glomeruloid vascularization, and necrosis. For biopsies, dogs with astrocytic tumors lived longer than those with oligodendroglial or undefined tumor types (median survival 743, 205, and 144 days, respectively). Dogs with low-grade gliomas lived longer than those with high-grade gliomas (median survival 734 and 194 days, respectively). Based on analysis of tumor biopsies, low mitotic counts, absence of glomeruloid vascularization, and absence of necrosis correlated with increased survival (median 293, 223, and 220 days, respectively), whereas high mitotic counts, glomeruloid vascularization, and necrosis correlated with poor survival (median 190, 170, and 154 days, respectively). Mitotic count was the only histological feature in biopsy samples that significantly correlated with survival (< .05). Whole-brain analyses for those same histologic features had similar and more robust correlations, and were statistically significant for all features (< .05). The small size of biopsy samples may explain differences between biopsy and whole-brain tumor data. These findings will allow more accurate prognosis for gliomas.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34219560/