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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat injection-site sarcoma treated by wide surgery in 91 cases

By Phelps, Holly A et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2011·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Radical excision with five-centimeter margins for treatment of feline injection-site sarcomas: 91 cases (1998-2002).

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of 91 cats with injection-site sarcomas (a type of cancer that can develop at vaccination sites) underwent surgery to remove the tumors completely. After surgery, 14% of the cats had the tumors come back locally, and 20% developed metastasis (spread to other parts of the body). On average, cats that did not have a recurrence lived significantly longer, with a median survival time of about 1,461 days compared to 499 days for those with recurrence. The surgery had some complications, but overall, it showed promise in improving outcomes for cats with this condition.

People also search for: cat injection-site sarcoma treatment · feline cancer surgery recovery · cat tumor recurrence symptoms

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate outcomes of radical excision of feline injection-site sarcomas (ISS) via assessment of local recurrence and metastasis rates, survival times, and complications associated with surgery. DESIGN: Retrospective case series. ANIMALS: 91 cats with ISS. PROCEDURES: Medical records of cats that had radical excision of ISS without adjunctive treatment were reviewed. Information extracted included sex, type of surgical procedure, histologic tumor grade, tumor diameter, time from tumor detection to definitive surgery, complications associated with surgery, whether tumors recurred locally or metastasized, and survival times. Diagnosis of ISS was histologically confirmed, and additional follow-up was performed. RESULTS: Overall median survival time was 901 days. Thirteen of 91 (14%) cats had local tumor recurrence; 18 (20%) cats had evidence of metastasis after surgery. Median survival time of cats with and without recurrence was 499 and 1,461 days, respectively. Median survival time of cats with and without metastasis was 388 and 1,528 days, respectively. Tumor recurrence and metastasis were significantly associated with survival time, whereas other examined variables were not. Major complications occurred in 10 cats, including 7 with incisional dehiscence. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Radical excision of ISS resulted in a metastasis rate similar to rates reported previously; the local recurrence rate appeared to be substantially less than rates reported after less aggressive surgeries, with or without adjuvant treatment. Major complication rates were similar to rates reported previously after aggressive surgical resection of ISS. Radical excision may be a valuable means of attaining an improved outcome in the treatment of feline ISS.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21718202/