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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Surgical biopsy of abdominal lymph nodes in cats and its benefits

By Corrêa, Luís M & Demetriou, Jackie L·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2020·Dick White Referrals, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Retrospective assessment of the clinical relevance of surgical biopsies of abdominal lymph nodes in cats: 51 cases (2014-2018).

Species:
cat
LymphomaStomach & digestionCats

Plain-English summary

A group of 51 cats underwent surgery to biopsy their abdominal lymph nodes due to issues like swelling. Many of these cats had enlarged lymph nodes, but some appeared normal on ultrasound, yet were later diagnosed with conditions like lymphoma. The biopsies provided more accurate diagnoses compared to just using cytology (a less invasive test), revealing issues like inflammatory bowel disease and cancer. Overall, the surgical biopsies helped vets better understand the cats' health and confirm or rule out serious diseases.

People also search for: cat swollen lymph nodes · cat lymphoma diagnosis · cat inflammatory bowel disease treatment

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The aims of this study were to assess surgical biopsy of abdominal lymph nodes (LNs) in cats taken at the time of exploratory laparotomy and to evaluate any additional benefit of histopathology compared with LN cytology. METHODS: We carried out a retrospective study from a single institution of cats that had abdominal ultrasound and LN biopsies as part of an exploratory laparotomy (2014-2018). Clinical records were reviewed for presenting signs, medical investigations, ultrasound, cytology, surgical findings and histopathology. RESULTS: Fifty-one cats were included. In total, 60 LNs were biopsied. Forty-four cats had evident LN enlargement at the time of surgery. Nine of those cases were reported to have normal-sized LNs on ultrasound, including one cat that was subsequently diagnosed with lymphoma. Ultrasound-guided LN aspiration was performed in 19 cases. Five of these cats had a histological diagnosis of neoplasia following biopsy, but only one was correctly identified with cytology. Histopathology results were reactive hyperplasia (n = 41), tumour metastasis (n = 11), lymphadenitis (n = 6), inconclusive (n = 1) and normal (n = 1). The most common final diagnoses were inflammatory bowel disease (n = 17/51) and gastrointestinal lymphoma (n = 10/51). There were 15 cats with neoplastic disease; LN biopsies confirmed metastatic disease in 10 and ruled out nodal involvement in five. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Surgical biopsy of grossly enlarged or normal abdominal LNs provides additional information to LN cytology in cats and in the majority of cases is associated with a positive histological diagnosis. There appears to be the potential to underdiagnose neoplasia with cytology alone.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32419573/