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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Survival factors in dogs with urinary bladder cancer after CT scan

By Iwasaki, Ryota et al.Ā·Published in Veterinary and comparative oncologyĀ·2019Ā·Faculty of Applied Biological Sciences, JapanĀ·View original on PubMed →

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Original publication title: Survival analysis in dogs with urinary transitional cell carcinoma that underwent whole-body computed tomography at diagnosis.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 7-year-old female dog with urinary transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) was diagnosed using whole-body CT scans. The scans revealed that her cancer had spread to nearby lymph nodes and possibly to her bones and lungs. Unfortunately, dogs with TCC located in the urethra had a shorter survival time compared to those with tumors in the bladder, averaging only about 121 days versus 420 days. The study suggests that whole-body CT can help predict how long a dog might live after a TCC diagnosis, which can guide treatment decisions.

People also search for: dog urinary cancer prognosis Ā· transitional cell carcinoma treatment in dogs Ā· dog bladder cancer survival time

Abstract

This retrospective study aimed to evaluate factors associated with survival and to compare characteristics between tumour localizations in dogs with urinary transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) that underwent whole-body computed tomography (CT) at diagnosis. Dogs with histologically confirmed TCC that received medical therapy between 2010 and 2017 were included; dogs that underwent surgery or radiotherapy for the primary tumour were excluded. According to the CT findings, primary tumour localization (classified into the Bladder, Urethra and Bladder and Urethra groups), prostate involvement, iliosacral lymphadenomegaly, sternal lymphadenomegaly and metastasis to the bone and lung were evaluated for survival analysis. CT at diagnosis revealed iliosacral lymphadenomegaly, sternal lymphadenomegaly, bone metastasis and lung metastasis in 47.7%, 18.5%, 24.6% and 35.4% of the 65 included dogs, respectively. The overall median survival time was 196 days. On multivariable analysis, TCC localization (hazard ratio [HR], 1.90; P = .037), bone metastasis (HR, 2.76; P = .013) and sternal lymphadenomegaly (HR, 3.56; P = .004) were significantly associated with survival. Compared to the Bladder group (n = 16), the Urethra group (n = 26) had higher metastasis rates to the bone (6.3% vs 42.3%; P = .045) and lung (6.3% vs 46.2%; P = .022). The survival time was shorter in the Urethra group than in the Bladder group (121.5 vs 420&#x2009;days; P&#x2009;<&#x2009;.001), and it was similar only in female dogs (247 vs 420 days; P = .031). These findings suggest that whole-body CT could be valuable for predicting the prognosis in urinary TCC.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31012230/