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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How new tests change lymphoma stage in dogs

By Pinto, Maria Teresa et al.·Published in In vivo (Athens, Greece)·2024·Member of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons (MRCVS), United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Stage Migration in Canine Multicentric Lymphoma: Impact of Diagnostic Techniques on Assessing Disease Extent.

Species:
dog
LymphomaStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 23 dogs diagnosed with multicentric lymphoma (a type of cancer affecting multiple lymph nodes) underwent different diagnostic tests to determine the extent of their disease. The tests included physical exams, blood tests, X-rays, ultrasounds, and cytology (cell analysis) of organs. The results showed that using more advanced diagnostic techniques often changed the stage of cancer assigned to the dogs, with some moving to higher or lower stages based on the tests used. This highlights the importance of consistent testing methods to accurately assess the disease's severity.

People also search for: dog lymphoma stages · canine cancer diagnosis tests · multicentric lymphoma treatment options

Abstract

BACKGROUND/AIM: Stage migration, a phenomenon triggered by technological advancements allowing more sensitive tumor spread detection, results in alterations in the distribution of cancer stages within a population. Canine multicentric lymphoma is staged I to V based on the affected anatomic site(s) and substage a or b depending on the presence of tumor-related clinical signs. The primary objective of this study was to assess the influence of various diagnostic techniques on staging accuracy and determine whether multiple staging methods lead to significant stage migration, impacting the reliability of disease stage assignments. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Dogs cytologically diagnosed with multicentric lymphoma were staged using four different staging methods (A-D): A (physical examination, hemogram, blood smear), B (A plus thoracic X-ray, abdominal ultrasound), C (B plus liver and spleen cytology) and D (C plus bone marrow cytology). RESULTS: Twenty-three dogs were enrolled: 16 females (70%) and seven males (30%). Regarding immunophenotype, 21 dogs (91.3%) were B-cell and two dogs (8.7%) were T-cell. Stage migration was observed between all staging methods. Between A and B, 12 animals migrated from stage III to stage IV. Between B and C, four animals migrated, three to a higher stage (stage III to IV) and one to a lower stage (stage IV to III). Between C and D, one animal migrated from stage IV to V. The differences between staging methods A and B were statistically significant (p≤0.001). CONCLUSION: Stage migration in canine multicentric lymphoma depends on the diagnostic methods used and reinforces the need to use standardized staging methods to avoid it.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38688606/