Relationship Between Clinicopathological Features and Prognosis in Appendicular Osteosarcoma in Dogs.

Journal of Comparative Pathology
Tainã N GuimLuciana Sonne

Abstract

Osteosarcoma is the most common primary bone neoplasm in dogs and often involves the appendicular skeleton. We report the clinicopathological and prognostic features of appendicular osteosarcomas diagnosed in 153 dogs from 2008 to 2018. The survival data for 22 dogs that underwent surgery and chemotherapy were statistically compared with the clinical, histopathological and immunohistochemical data for correlation with prognosis. The affected dogs had a mean age of 9.1 years and a mean body weight of 33.4 kg. No sex predilection was detected, although the incidence was slightly higher in females (52%). Large mixed and purebred dogs were most commonly affected. Long bones were affected in 124 cases (92.5%; 124/134). The extremities affected within long bones were the metaphysis of the proximal humerus (29%), distal radius (17.7%), distal femur (15.3%) and proximal tibia (7.2%). Histologically, osteoblastic osteosarcoma was most commonly detected (56.9%), followed by chondroblastic (13.7%), telangiectatic (11.8%), fibroblastic (7.8%), giant cell-rich (5.2%) and poorly differentiated neoplasms (4.6%). Regional lymph nodes were available for analysis in 28 out of 70 excisional biopsies from amputated entire limbs. Metastases to regi...Continue Reading

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