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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Survival after anal sac cancer surgery with chemo in dogs

By Potanas, Christopher P et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2015·Metropolitan Veterinary Hospital·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Surgical excision of anal sac apocrine gland adenocarcinomas with and without adjunctive chemotherapy in dogs: 42 cases (2005-2011).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 42 dogs with anal sac apocrine gland adenocarcinomas (a type of cancer) underwent surgery to remove the tumors, with some also receiving chemotherapy. The study found that dogs with swollen lymph nodes near the spine had a shorter survival time, especially if those lymph nodes were also removed during surgery. Additionally, dogs that received certain chemotherapy drugs had a shorter time before the cancer returned. However, the completeness of the tumor removal did not affect how long the dogs lived or how long they stayed cancer-free.

People also search for: dog anal sac cancer treatment · dog cancer survival rates · anal sac tumor surgery in dogs

Abstract

Objective-To identify variables associated with prognosis in dogs undergoing surgical excision of anal sac apocrine gland adenocarcinomas (ASACs) with and without adjunctive chemotherapy. Design-Retrospective case series. Animals-42 dogs with ASACs. Procedures-Information on signalment, clinical signs, diagnostic procedures, surgical procedures, adjunctive therapies, survival time, and disease-free interval was obtained from the medical records. Results-Survival time was significantly associated with the presence of sublumbar lymphadenopathy and sublumbar lymph node extirpation, with median survival time significantly shorter for dogs with sublumbar lymphadenopathy (hazard ratio, 2.31) than for those without and for dogs that underwent lymph node extirpation (hazard ratio, 2.31) than for those that did not. Disease-free interval was significantly associated with the presence of sublumbar lymphadenopathy, lymph node extirpation, and administration of platinum-containing chemotherapeutic agents, with median disease-free interval significantly shorter for dogs with sublumbar lymphadenopathy (hazard ratio, 2.47) than for those without, for dogs that underwent lymph node extirpation (hazard ratio, 2.47) than for those that did not, and for dogs that received platinum-containing chemotherapeutic agents (hazard ratio, 2.69) than for those that did not. Survival time and disease-free interval did not differ among groups when dogs were grouped on the basis of histopathologic margins (complete vs marginal vs incomplete excision). Conclusions and Clinical Relevance-Results suggested that in dogs with ASAC undergoing surgical excision, the presence of sublumbar lymphadenopathy and lymph node extirpation were both negative prognostic factors. However, completeness of surgical excision was not associated with survival time or disease-free interval.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25835172/