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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog's cheekbone rebuilt with 3D-printed scaffold after tumor removal

By Kang, Kyu-Won et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2022·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, South Korea·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Zygomatic arch reconstruction with a patient-specific polycaprolactone/beta-tricalcium phosphate scaffold after parosteal osteosarcoma resection in a dog.

Species:
dog
OsteosarcomaMovement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A 13-year-old female spayed Maltese was brought in with swelling under her right eye, which turned out to be a low-grade tumor on her zygomatic arch (the bone that forms the cheek). The vet performed surgery to remove the tumor and used a special 3D-printed scaffold to help reconstruct the bone. After the surgery, the dog had some mild tearing for about 20 days, but this went away. Ten months later, follow-up scans showed good healing with no signs of cancer returning, and the dog's face looked normal.

People also search for: dog eye swelling · Maltese tumor treatment · zygomatic arch reconstruction in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the surgical application of a 3D-printing-based, patient-specific, biocompatible polycaprolactone/beta-tricalcium phosphate (PCL/β-TCP) scaffold to reconstruct the zygomatic arch after tumor resection in a dog. ANIMAL: A 13 year old female spayed Maltese. STUDY DESIGN: Case report METHODS: The dog's presenting complaint was swelling ventral to her right eye. A round mass arising from the caudal aspect of the right zygomatic arch was identified by computed tomography (CT). The histopathologic diagnosis was a low-grade spindle-cell tumor. Surgical resection was planned to achieve 5 mm margins. A patient-specific osteotomy guide and polycaprolactone/beta-tricalcium phosphate (PCL/β-TCP) scaffold were produced. Osteotomy, including 30% of total zygomatic arch length, was performed using an oscillating saw aligned with the guide. The scaffold was placed in the defect. Parosteal osteosarcoma was diagnosed based on histopathological examination. Excision was complete, with the closest margin measuring 0.3 mm. RESULTS: Mild epiphora, due to surgical site swelling, subsided after 20 days. Tissue formation within and around the porous scaffold was noted on CT 10 months postoperatively, with no evidence of metastasis or local recurrence. Facial conformation appeared symmetrical, and no complications were noted 16 months postoperatively. CONCLUSION: The use of a 3D-printing-based, patient-specific, biocompatible PCL/β-TCP scaffold successfully restored the structure and function of the zygomatic arch without complications, even following wide zygomectomy for complete tumor removal.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36168884/