Prevalence of malignancy and factors affecting outcome of cats undergoing splenectomy

Author:

Rossanese Matteo1,Williams Heather2,Puerta Benito de la3,Scott Peter4,Chanoit Guillaume4,Guillén Alexandra1

Affiliation:

1. The Royal Veterinary College Department of Clinical Science and Services, Hatfield, England

2. Small Animal Teaching Hospital of the University of Liverpool, Neston, England

3. North Down Specialist Referrals, Bletchingley, England

4. Small Animal Referral Hospital Langford Vets, University of Bristol, Bristol, England

Abstract

Abstract OBJECTIVE To determine the prevalence of splenic malignancy in cats undergoing splenectomy and to investigate possible factors associated with post-operative outcome. ANIMALS 62 client-owned cats that underwent splenectomy. METHODS Medical records of 4 UK-based referral hospitals were searched and data reviewed retrospectively over 17 years. Factors associated with outcomes post-splenectomy were analyzed. RESULTS 50 out of 62 cats (81%) were diagnosed with splenic neoplasia. Mast cell tumor ([MCT], 42%), hemangiosarcoma ([HSA], 40%), lymphoma and histiocytic sarcoma (6% each) were the most common tumor types. Fifteen cats (24%) presented with spontaneous hemoabdomen and were all diagnosed with splenic neoplasia. The diagnostic accuracy of cytology to detect splenic malignant lesions was 73% (100% for MCTs and 54% for mesenchymal tumors). Median survival time for cats with nonneoplastic splenic lesions was 715 days (IQR, 18 to 1,368) and 136 days for cats with splenic neoplasia (IQR, 35 to 348); median survival time was longer for cats with splenic MCT when compared to cats with HSA (348 vs 94 days; P < .001). Presence of metastatic disease and anemia (PCV < 24%) at diagnosis were associated with a poorer survival when considering all cats. Presence of anemia, a splenic mass on imaging or spontaneous hemoabdomen were associated with a diagnosis of HSA (P < .001). CLINICAL RELEVANCE Benign splenic lesions were uncommon in this cohort of cats. Spontaneous hemoabdomen should prompt the clinician to suspect neoplasia in cats with splenic disease. Anemia and evidence of metastasis at diagnosis were poor prognostic factors regardless of the final diagnosis.

Publisher

American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA)

Subject

General Veterinary

Reference32 articles.

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2. Prevalence and type of splenic diseases in cats: 455 cases (1985-1991);Spangler WL,1992

3. Characterisation of the signalment, clinical and survival characteristics of 41 cats with mast cell neoplasia;Litster AL,2006

4. Outcome following splenectomy in cats;Gordon SS,2010

5. Incidence of malignancy and outcomes for dogs undergoing splenectomy for incidentally detected nonruptured splenic nodules or masses: 105 cases (2009-2013);Cleveland MJ,2016

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