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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Collie dog with esophageal cancer helped by metal stent to ease

By Hansen, Katherine S et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2012·Department of Radiation Oncology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Use of a self-expanding metallic stent to palliate esophageal neoplastic obstruction in a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

An 11-year-old spayed female Collie was brought in for severe regurgitation, difficulty swallowing, excessive drooling, coughing, and weight loss that had lasted about 12 weeks. She had been diagnosed with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, a type of cancer, and had a feeding tube placed due to her condition. Since the owner chose not to pursue surgery, the veterinarian placed a self-expanding metallic stent in her esophagus to relieve the obstruction and also injected botulinum toxin into her salivary glands to help with the drooling. After the stent was placed, the dog showed improvement in her symptoms and remained comfortable until she was euthanized for an unrelated issue 12 weeks later.

People also search for: dog regurgitation treatment · Collie esophageal cancer · excessive drooling in dogs · palliative care for dog cancer

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION: An 11-year-old spayed female Collie was evaluated because of regurgitation, dysphagia, severe ptyalism, coughing, and weight loss of approximately 12 weeks' duration. Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma had been diagnosed prior to referral on the basis of results of radiographic and endoscopic examination and histologic evaluation of biopsy samples. A percutaneous endoscopically placed gastrostomy (PEG) tube had been inserted 2 weeks prior to referral, and the dog was being treated for infection at the gastrostomy site. CLINICAL FINDINGS: Physical examination findings included marked ptyalism, stertor, and inflammation and discharge at the gastrostomy site. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: Surgical options were declined by the owner, and palliative treatment was chosen to alleviate clinical signs and facilitate PEG tube removal. With fluoroscopic guidance, a self-expanding metallic stent was placed in the esophageal lumen at the site of obstruction. Botulinum toxin A was injected into the mandibular salivary glands under ultrasonographic guidance as treatment for severe ptyalism. Following discharge, clinical improvement was reported until euthanasia for unrelated disease 12 weeks after stent placement. Necropsy revealed that the stent had not migrated and had remained patent with some tumor ingrowth but no evidence of stricture or obstruction. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Esophageal stenting effectively treated obstruction and improved clinical signs and may be beneficial for palliative treatment in other animals with malignant esophageal tumors. Although the degree to which botulinum toxin A injection into salivary glands improved clinical signs could not be determined, it may potentially be useful as adjunctive treatment to reduce severe ptyalism.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22559110/