Feline musculoskeletal tumours Flashcards
Outline feline cutaneous haemangiosarcomas
✜ Non-visceral haemangiosarcoma (cutaneous/ subcutaneous) is more common than visceral.
✜ Subcutaneous form is more aggressive than the cutaneous (dermal) form, with local recurrence
and metastasis widely reported.
✜ Common sites for the subcutaneous form are the flank, ventral abdomen, thorax and proximal pelvic limb.
✜ Adjunctive radiotherapy and chemotherapy with doxorubicin may be of value therapeutically, following surgical resection.
Outline feline peripheral nerves sheath tumours
✜ Uncommon tumour affecting subcutaneous
tissues and muscle.
✜ Most often located around head, neck or limbs.
✜ Most are biologically benign. Malignant tumours
are not reported to metastasise; therefore, there is a good prognosis if completely excised. Local recurrence is likely with incomplete excision.
Outline Feline restrictive orbital myofibroblastic
sarcoma (feline orbital pseudotumour)
Progressive debilitating disease of the orbit and
adjacent connective tissues, characterised by
restricted mobility of the globe and eyelids with
secondary corneal disease; insidious in onset.
✜ Unilateral or bilateral and may affect oral cavity
concurrently. No discrete mass.
✜ Computed tomography shows diffuse episcleral
thickening.
✜ Disease process involves infiltration of neoplastic
spindle cells, and collagen deposition within the
orbit, eyelids, periorbital skin and soft tissues.
Extension occurs along fascial planes to include
these sites.
✜ Prognosis is poor since aggressive treatment
is not yet reported. Cats are usually euthanised
Outline feline sarcoids (cutaenous fibropapilloma)
✜ Reported in domestic cats in North America,
Europe, New Zealand and Australia, and in captive
African lions.
✜ Feline sarcoid-associated papillomavirus
(FeSarPV) DNA detected in lesions.
✜ Often located on head, lips, nares, footpads or
tip of tail.
✜ Non-encapsulated dermal masses consist of
spindle to stellate cells. Mitotic rate ≤1 per x 400
field. Overlying epithelium is hyperplastic with long
branching, rete ridges.
✜ Often contain mast cells amidst bundles of
collagen fibrils, which help to distinguish sarcoids
from schwannomas and fibrosarcomas.
✜ Metastasis not reported; therefore, prognosis is
good if completely excised. Local recurrence is
likely with incomplete excision
How do you diagnose FISS?
Incisional biopsy
What is the 3-2-1 rule?
recommends biopsy of a mass at an injection site:
✜ If the mass persists more than 3 months
✜ If the mass is greater than 2 cm in diameter
✜ If the mass is increasing in size 1 month after injection
Compare canine and feline osteosarcomas
feline OSAs are slow growing compared with those in dogs, meaning that median survival times in cats (treated with amputation) are more than double those
of dogs (treated with amputation and adjunct chemotherapy): approximately 24–44 months versus 8–18 months, respectively
If mets occur it is usually late in the disease process
Cats more axial than appendicular (other way round for dogs)
Cats more FL Dogs more HL
Why do cats seem to get lots of mets (e.g. pulmonary adenocarcinomas) to the digits?
possibly because of an increased blood
supply, which facilitates heat loss through their pads.
How do you treat fibrosarcomas?
Surgical excision ‘en bloc’ removing 2 to 3 cm of normal tissue in all surgical plane
Note that these tumours have pseudocapsules of compressed neoplastic cells around them and should never be ‘shelled out’.
Outline feline sarcoma virus
These lesions present as multiple fibrosarcomas in young cats. Such cases will invariably have been exposed to feline leukaemia virus (FeLV) as the feline sarcoma virus causing these lesions is a recombinant virus formed from the cat’s DNA and FeLV proviral DNA. Cats affected with feline sarcoma virus have a poor prognosis, but this condition is mercifully quite rare
What may you see prior to a SCC presenting on the skin of a cat?
Pre-cancerous changes (actinickeratosis) can be seen preceding the development of the tumour.
/Do SCC metastasis readily
SCCs have a low metastatic potential to lungs and local lymph nodes. Nevertheless, chest radiographs and FNA of drainage lymph nodes are recommended, especially prior to embarking on an extensive or lengthy course of therapy
How can sx be used for SCC on the face?
Pinnectomy results in long survival times. Nasal planec-tomy is more cosmetically and functionally challenging, but also produces good survival times and is the treatment of choice for the larger, more invasive tumours.
How can photodynamic therapy be used for SCC?
PDT involves the use of a chemical (photosensitiser),which is taken up preferentially by cancer cells. The chemical is activated by light of a certain wavelength, causing the death of cells that have absorbed the chemical. Since the therapy is selective for cancer cells and spares normal cells, the results can be very pleasing cosmetically. PDT has been used on feline SCCs and is best employed on very superficial lesions. It is currently associated with a high recurrence rate as the photosensitiseris applied as a cream and only penetrates the very top layers of the skin
Outline the appearance of basal cell tumours
usually solitary and are mostly seen in older cats (the average age reported is 10 years). They can remain the same size for long periods of time. Basal cell tumours can have a variable appearance, sometimes looking solid, ulcerated or cystic. They are the most common pigmented tumour seen in cats and can have characteristics suggestive of aggressive behaviour both on cytology and histopathology