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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Surgery and outcomes for cats with primary rib tumors

By Cinti, F et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2024·Surgery Department, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Surgical treatment and outcome of primary rib tumours in cats: eight cases (2016-2023).

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 5-year-old domestic shorthair cat was diagnosed with a rib tumor and underwent surgery to remove it. The tumor was identified as hemangiosarcoma, a type of cancer, which can be aggressive. After surgery, the cat faced some minor complications but recovered well and was discharged after three days. While the prognosis for hemangiosarcoma is generally guarded, this cat survived for 550 days post-surgery, showing that with treatment, some cats can have a good outcome.

People also search for: cat rib tumor treatment · hemangiosarcoma in cats · cat surgery recovery time

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To describe the clinical features and oncologic outcome for cats with primary rib tumours. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Medical records for cats with surgically treated primary rib tumours from six veterinary referral centres were reviewed. Signalment, preoperative clinical signs, reconstruction technique, and surgical and oncologic outcome were retrieved from medical records or by telephone interview with owners and/or referring veterinarians. RESULTS: Of the eight cats with primary rib tumours, three had hemangiosarcoma, two had osteosarcoma and one cat each had chondrosarcoma, osteochondroma and osteoma. The size of the primary rib mass ranged from 2 × 2 × 1.6 cm to 9 × 7 × 7.5 cm. Three minor and one major complication developed during the immediate post-operative period. Surgery consisted of thoracic wall resection in all cats. All animals survived the procedure and the median time to discharge was 3 days. The survival time for benign tumours was 150 (case 5) and 466 (case 4) days, while for malignant tumours ranged from 105 to 550 days (cases 1 to 3, cases 6 to 8). CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Hemangiosarcoma and osteosarcoma were the most represented primary rib tumours in this cohort of cats. Wide surgical excision and adjuvant chemotherapy is recommended for cats with hemangiosarcoma and osteosarcoma, but the prognosis remains guarded. Prognosis appears to be fair for the other tumour types.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39113158/