Oncology: Mast Cell Tumour and Transitional Cell Tumours Flashcards
What is the most common diagnosed skin tumour in the dog?
Mast cell tumour
Other sites: subcut, conjunctiva, oral mucosa, GIT
What is the clinical presentation of mast cell tumours?
- Cutaenous mass of variable appearance anywhere in the body
- Local effects- erytherma, oedeama, pruritus, haemorrhage
- Systemic- vomiting, melaena
Visceral form- metastasis
How is mast cell tumour diagnosed?
FNA of the mass
* Usually diagnostic
* Characteristic purple granules
How are mast cell staged?
Haematology/Biochem/Urinalysis
* Usually unremarkable
* Rule out co-morbs
FNA of biopsy of local LN
Abdominal US- assess liver, spleen, LNs
Thoracic radiographs- lung metastasis
What affects prognosis of mast cells?
Clinical
* Location
* Breed
* Appearance
* Systemic illness
* Recurrence
Lab
* Histological grade
What does each grade I- III mean?
Grade I
* Well differentiated tumours
* Benign behaviour
* Unlikely to cause death
Grade II
* Variably metastatic
* Can cause death
* Nodal metastasis- poor
Grade III
* Poorly differentiated
* Likely to be cause of death
What margins are reccomended for mast cell tumour surgery?
3cm margins and 1 fascial plane
1-2cmfor grade I and II
I/II- potential to be curative
Incomplete margins:
* 1/4 grade II recur
When could radiotherapy be given for mast cell tumours?
Post op or for local LN metastasis
When is chemotherapy indicated for mast cell tumours?
What is commonly used?
- High grade or confirmed metastasis
- Neoadjunctively prior to surgery
- Residual microscopic disease
Vinblastine/prednisolone
or
Lomustine
TKIs- expensive
- How does feline cutaneous MCT commonly present?
- Where is visceral most likely?
- Cutaneous, raised, hairless massess- surgical excision usually curative
- Splenic, intestinal
- Where are transitional cell carcinomas most commonly found?
- Where do they commonly metastasise?
- Bladder trigone but also urethra and prostate in males
- Medial iliac LNs and other orfans
What are presenting signs of TCC?
- Lower urinary tract signs- haematuria, stranguria, pollakyuria
- Occasionally signs related with bone metastasis
- ‘complicated UTI’
How is TCC diagnosed?
Histopathological
Risk of seeding with FNA
Traumatic catheterisazation/prostatic wash
Cytoscopy
How are TCC staged?
Haematology/biochemistry/urine analysis
* Neutrophilia, renal dysfunction, UTI
Abdominal US
Radiography- lung/bone metastasis
How is TCC treated?
Surgery rarely possible
Medical treatment:
* NSAIDs- MST 181d
* Mitoxantrone and NSAIDs- MST 291d
Palliative care- regular urine cultures and ABs, cystostomy/urethral stents
Rapid deterioration