Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Long survival after skull tumor surgery and radiation in three dogs
By Holmes ME et al.·2019·Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on Europe PMC →
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Original publication title: Prolonged survival after craniectomy with skull reconstruction and adjuvant definitive radiation therapy in three dogs with multilobular osteochondrosarcoma.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
Three dogs with a rare skull tumor called multilobular osteochondrosarcoma were treated with surgery and radiation therapy. They all had noticeable lumps on their skulls, and one dog also showed signs of neurological issues. The dogs underwent surgery to remove the tumors, followed by radiation therapy, which they tolerated well. Remarkably, the dogs lived for 387, 422, and 730 days after surgery, with the dog that had neurological problems showing improvement. This approach of combining surgery with radiation therapy helped extend their lives and improve their quality of life.
People also search for: dog skull tumor treatment · multilobular osteochondrosarcoma in dogs · dog radiation therapy recovery
Abstract
Multilobular osteochondrosarcoma is an uncommon canine tumor but presents a treatment challenge when arising on the skull. This retrospective case series study aimed to describe outcome of a multimodality treatment approach involving aggressive surgical resection and adjuvant definitive radiation therapy in a group of dogs with multilobular osteochondrosarcoma of the calvarium. Clinical, imaging, treatment, and outcome data were collected from retrospective review of medical records. Three dogs met inclusion criteria. The presenting clinical complaint was the presence of a mass effect of the skull in all three dogs and concurrent neurologic abnormalities in one dog. Advanced imaging revealed aggressive lytic and proliferative tumors arising from the calvarium in all three dogs. All dogs were treated surgically with a modified craniectomy, repaired with a titanium mesh-polymethyl methacrylate bone cement implant or a low prolife titanium mesh plate and followed by adjuvant definitive radiation therapy with 2.5 Gy per fraction for 22 daily fractions. There were no major immediate surgical complications and radiation was well tolerated overall. Neurologic improvement was seen in the patient that presented with neurologic disease. Survival times from surgery were 387, 422, and 730 days and from the time of radiation were 358, 397, and 677 days. Findings in this sample of three dogs supported the use of aggressive therapy with a combination of surgical craniectomy and cranioplasty utilizing a titanium mesh implant and high dose definitive radiation therapy for local control and prolonged survival times in dogs with multilobular osteochondrosarcoma of the skull.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Europe PMC: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/31012206