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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Eye eyelid masses in dogs treated with debulking and cryotherapy

By Zibura, Ashley E et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2019·College of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Retrospective evaluation of canine palpebral masses treated with debulking and cryotherapy: 46 cases.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with eyelid masses, including adenomas and papillomas, underwent a treatment involving surgery to remove part of the mass (debulking) followed by freezing the remaining tissue (cryotherapy). Out of 46 masses treated, only 7 (about 15%) came back after an average of about a year. The study found that mixed adenoma-papillomas were more likely to return compared to other types, while adenomas did not recur at all. Overall, this treatment was effective for managing eyelid masses in dogs.

People also search for: dog eyelid mass treatment · why does my dog have a lump on its eyelid · mixed adenoma-papilloma in dogs

Abstract

PURPOSE: To evaluate the recurrence frequency and the time to recurrence of canine palpebral masses treated with debulking and cryotherapy. METHODS: Medical records of dogs that underwent debulking and cryotherapy for palpebral masses from December 2010 to November 2015 at the University of Minnesota's Veterinary Medical Center were reviewed. A telephone survey with owners was used to determine recurrence and time to recurrence. RESULTS: Forty-six masses (31 dogs) were included in this retrospective study. Included palpebral masses were as follows: adenomas 17/46 (37%), epitheliomas 8/46 (17.4%), papillomas 6/46 (13%), inflammatory masses 6/46 (13%), mixed adenoma-papillomas 6/46 (13%), mixed epithelioma-papillomas 2/46 (4.4%), and a melanocytoma 1/46 (2.2%). Of the seven masses that were noted to recur (7/46, 15.2%), three were mixed adenoma-papillomas (three of six adenoma-papillomas, 50%), two were epitheliomas (two of eight epitheliomas, 25%), one was a papilloma (one of six papillomas, 16.7%), and one was a melanocytoma (one of one melanocytoma, 100%). Average recurrence time was 367.9 days [range: 30-904 days]. A significant association between tumor type and tumor recurrence was found (P = .009). Adenomas were significantly less likely to recur (P = .017), and mixed adenoma-papillomas were significantly more likely to recur (P = .001). CONCLUSIONS: Debulking and cryotherapy is an effective method of treatment for eyelid masses in dogs with a low study recurrence rate of 15.2% and average recurrence time of 367.9 days. Results also suggest that mixed adenoma-papilloma masses have a significantly higher recurrence rate than other eyelid masses, whereas adenomas had no recurrence in our study population.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30052302/