Equine oncology Flashcards

1
Q

Main tumours seen in horses?

A

Approx 90% are skin tumours

  • sarcoids
  • SCC
  • papilloma
  • melanoma
  • mast cell tumour
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2
Q

Risk factors for tumours in horses?

A

Age
Breed - melanoma in Lipizzaner, ocular SCC in shires and clydesdales
Sex - penile SCC in males (and SCC in other locations)
Location and management - SCC with UV exposure

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3
Q

Definition of paraneoplastic syndromes?

A

Diseases or combination of signs that arise as a direct consequence of a tumour but not deriving from the simple physical presence of the tumour

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4
Q

What are the 4 main groups of paraneoplastic syndromes in horses?

A
  1. Mucocutaneous and skin syndromes: paraneoplastic pemphigus, pruritis
  2. Neurological syndromes
  3. Haematological syndromes: anaemia, plycytaemia, granulocytosis
  4. Endocrine and metabolic: cachexia, hypercalcaemia, hypertrophic (pulmonary) osteopathy (Marie’s disease)
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5
Q

Diagnosis of tumours in horses?

A

Direct tests: biopsy, tumour markers
Imaging: US, Rx, endoscopy, CT, MRI
Indirect tests: haematology, biochemistry, urinalysis

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6
Q

Methods of treating cancers in horses?

A

Ablative - surgery, laser/diathermy, cryotherapy, hypothermia
Cytotoxic - chemotherapy, radiotherapy, phototherapy, electrochemotherapy
Biological - immunotherapy, vaccines, cytokine therapy, gene therapy

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7
Q

Forms of lymphoma?

A

Multicentric
Alimentary
Mediastinal, thoracic or thymic
Cutaneous

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8
Q

Clinical presentation and signs of multi centric lymphoma in horses? Diagnosis and treatment?

A

Mature young horses: 4-12yo
Involvement of many organs and metastasis common
Weight loss, depression, ventral oedema, recurrent fever (vague signs)
Diagnosis - cytology or biopsy
Treatment - surgical removal if solitary lesions, chemotherapy?

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9
Q

Clinical presentation and signs of alimentary lymphoma in horses? Diagnosis and treatment? Prognosis?

A

20% of lymphoma cases and most common intestinal neoplasia
Older horses: >12y
Malabsorption, weight loss, colic
Diagnosis - cytology (peritoneal fluid, negative doesn’t rule out), biopsy
Treatment - surgical removal if solitary lesions, chemotherapy?
Prognosis depend on stage of disease, typically poor

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10
Q

Clinical presentation and signs of mediastinal, thoracic or thymic lymphoma in horses? Diagnosis and treatment? Prognosis?

A

Most common thoracic neoplasia
Horses of all ages
Weight loss, depression, ventral and forelimb oedema (right leg first), pleural effusion
Diagnosis - cytology (pleural effusion, lots tumour cells shed so easy diagnosis), biopsy
Palliative treatment - drain fluid to help breathing (but fill up again quickly)
Prognosis hopeless

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11
Q

Clinical presentation and signs of cutaneous lymphoma in horses? Diagnosis and treatment? Prognosis?

A
Rare
Older horses
Subcutaneous and cutaneous nodules
Diagnose with biopsy
Treatment - removal of solitary masses
Prognosis - less aggressive than the other forms, may become static for years or even regress
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12
Q

Clinical presentation and signs of haemangiosarcoma in horses? Diagnosis, treatment and prognosis?

A

Uncommon
Middle aged to older horses (but all ages possible)
No sex or breed predilection
Respiratory and musculoskeletal systems most commonly affected
Haemorrhage - haemoabdomen, haemothorax etc
Diagnosis - cytology, biopsy (difficult0
Limited and palliative treatment
Prognosis very poor

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13
Q

Tumours of the oral cavity in horses?

A

SCC - most common oral neoplasm
Ameloblastoma - odontogenic epithelium
Ossifying fibroma - young horses, rostral mandible
Melanoma - lip, parotid region

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14
Q

Tumours of the GIT in horses?

A

Gastric SCC
Intestinal lymphoma
Intestinal adenocarcinoma
Lipoma

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15
Q

Tumours of the liver in horses?

A

Hepatic adenocarcinoma

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16
Q

Tumours of the upper airway in horses?

A

SCC
(Atheroma, epidermal inclusion cyst, false nostril cyst)
(Nasal polyp)
(Progressive ethmoidal haematoma)
Guttural pouch melanoma - blood tinged nasal discharge

17
Q

Tumours of the lower airways and thoracic cavity of horses?

A

Pulmonary granular cell tumour
Haemangiosarcoma
Lymphoma

18
Q

Tumours of the cardiovascular and haematopoietic systems in horses?

A
CV
- haemangiosarcoma
Haematopoietic
- lymphoma
- plasma cell myeloma
- leukaemia
19
Q

Endocrine tumours in horses?

A

Pituitary - PPID
Thyroid - adenoma, adenocarcinoma
Adrenal gland - phaeochromocytoma

20
Q

CNS and peripheral nerve tumours of horses?

A
CNS:
- astrocytoma/neuroblastoma/meningioma - extremely rare
- lymphoma
- melanoma
- cholesterol granuloma?
Peripheral nerves:
- neuroma
- schwannoma
21
Q

Ocular tumours of the horses?

A
Orbit:
- sarcoid
- SCC
- melanoma
- mast cell tumour
- lymphoma
Globe:
- astrocytoma
- proliferative optic neuropathy
22
Q

Tumours of the reproductive tract in the horse?

A
Male:
- SCC
- melanoma
- sarcoid
- testicular tumours rare - teratoma
Female:
- vulvar/clitoral SCC
- granulosa (theca) cell tumour
- mammary gland tumours rare
23
Q

Tumours of the urinary tract in horses?

A

Kidney and bladder carcinomas

24
Q

Tumours of the musculoskeletal system in horses?

A
Muscle:
- rhabdomyoma
- rhabdomyosarcoma
- haemangiosarcoma
Bone:
- osteoma/osteosarcoma/osteochondroma - rare