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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Risk factors and tumor traits in female dogs with mammary tumors

By Dolka, Izabella et al.·Published in Scientific reports·2024·Department of Pathology and Veterinary Diagnostics·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Risk factor analysis and clinicopathological characteristics of female dogs with mammary tumours from a single-center retrospective study in Poland.

Species:
dog
Canine mammary tumorsBehaviour & energyDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of female dogs diagnosed with mammary tumors were studied to understand the types of tumors and factors affecting their outcomes. Most of the tumors were found to be malignant, particularly in older dogs, with larger tumors being more common in younger large-breed dogs. The research highlighted that dogs with multiple tumors tended to have smaller masses and that certain breeds were at higher risk for developing these tumors. Treatment outcomes showed that factors like tumor size and the presence of neoplastic emboli (cancer cells in blood vessels) significantly impacted survival rates, with larger tumors linked to a higher risk of death.

People also search for: dog mammary tumor treatment · signs of cancer in female dogs · breeds at risk for mammary tumors · dog tumor size and prognosis · dog cancer survival rates

Abstract

This is a comprehensive retrospective study to characterize female dogs with canine mammary tumors (CMTs) using a dataset retrieved from the archives of the Division of Animal Pathology, Institute of Veterinary Medicine in Warsaw, and to identify prognostic factors. Clinical and histopathological data of 1447 dogs with CMTs were included. Malignant tumours were found in 83.3% (n = 1206), benign tumours in 11.7% (n = 169), and non-neoplastic lesions in 5.0% (n = 72) of dogs. Dogs most often had grade II carcinomas (38.2%, 215/562) of a single histological subtype (88.5%, 1281/1447), mostly simple carcinoma (35.3%, 510/1447). Dogs with a median age of 10 years significantly often had larger (≥ 3 cm) and malignant CMTs, whereas intact females had smaller tumours (median size 2.0 cm). However, the threshold value for the age of the dog in the differentiation of malignant and non-neoplastic/benign masses could not be determined. Most females were hormonally active (76.4%, 372/487). Hormonally active dogs significantly more often had multiple tumours. Multiple tumours were significantly smaller (median 2.5 cm) than single ones. Among pedigree dogs, small-breed dogs were mostly recorded (43%, 428/1006). Twelve breeds had an increased risk of CMTs, regardless of tumour behaviour, compared with the theoretical distribution of pedigree dogs in Poland. Four breeds were often affected only by malignant and other four breeds only by non-neoplastic/benign CMT. Large-breed dogs were significantly younger and affected by larger CMT (median 4 cm) compared with small- and medium-breed dogs. Ninety dogs with a malignant CMT and complete records were included in the full analysis of CMT-specific survival (CMT-SS) with a median follow-up time of 20.0 months. We showed that the timing of ovariohysterectomy in relation to mastectomy was significantly associated with grade, CMT-SS, and CMT-related death. We indicated the low diagnostic accuracy of palpation of regional lymph nodes (RLN) in the prediction of their metastatic involvement. By multivariable analysis, dogs with neoplastic emboli, tumour ulceration, and simple or complex carcinoma had a significantly higher risk of local recurrence. Tumour size > 3 cm was as a strong independent predictor of lung metastases. Compared with dogs with an easily separated localized tumour, dogs with a multiple/diffuse malignant CMT pattern had a fivefold higher risk of death. The risk of death was significantly higher in the presence of neoplastic emboli (~ fivefold) and tumour ulceration (~ fourfold). Furthermore, the presence of neoplastic emboli and large tumour size were independent predictors of CMT-related death.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38448646/