Proposing Clinicopathological Staging and Mitotic Count as Prognostic Factors for Canine Soft Tissue Sarcomas

Author:

Cardoso de Almeida Moreira Andrea Regina1,Franzoni Mayara Simão1ORCID,dos Anjos Denner Santos2ORCID,César-Jark Paulo3,Nóbrega Juliano1,Laufer-Amorim Renée1ORCID,Valsecchi Henriques Marina1,Neto Osmar Pinto45,Fonseca-Alves Carlos Eduardo167ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Veterinary Clinic, School of Veterinary Medicine and Science, São Paulo State University (UNESP), Botucatu 18618-681, Brazil

2. Eletro-Onkovet Service, Franca 14406-005, Brazil

3. Onccarevet Clinic, Ribeirão Preto 14026-587, Brazil

4. Biomedical Engineering Department, Anhembi University, São Paulo 04546-001, Brazil

5. Arena235 Research Lab, São José dos Campos 12246-876, Brazil

6. Institute of Health Sciences, Paulista University (UNIP), Bauru 17048-290, Brazil

7. Veterinary Oncology Service (SEOVET), São Paulo 05016-000, Brazil

Abstract

Soft tissue sarcomas (STSs) are a heterogeneous group of malignant mesenchymal tumors with similar histological features and biological behaviors. They are characterized by a low to moderate local recurrence rate and low metastasis, affecting approximately 20% of patients. Although this tumor set is vital in veterinary medicine, no previous unified staging system or mitotic count has been associated with patient prognosis. Therefore, this study proposed a new clinicopathological staging method and evaluated a cut-off value for mitosis related to the survival of dogs affected by STS. This study included 105 dogs affected by STS, treated only with surgery, and a complete follow-up evaluation. The new clinicopathological staging system evaluated tumor size (T), nodal involvement (N), distant metastasis (M), and histological grading criteria (G) to categorize the tumor stage into four groups (stages I, II, III, and IV). The proposed tumor staging system was able to differentiate patients’ prognoses, with dogs with stage IV disease experiencing the lowest survival time and dogs with stage I disease having the highest survival time (p < 0.001). Moreover, we assessed the median mitosis (based on mitotic count) and its association with overall survival. Our study’s median mitosis was 5, and patients with ≤5 mitoses had a higher survival time (p = 0.006). Overall, the proposed staging system and mitotic count seemed promising in the prediction of patient prognosis.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary

Reference34 articles.

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4. Mast cell tumours and other skin neoplasia in Danish dogs--data from the Danish Veterinary Cancer Registry;Eriksen;Acta Vet. Scand.,2010

5. Withrow, S.J., Vail, D.M., and Page, R.L. (2013). Small Animal Clinical Oncology, Elsevier Saunders. [5th ed.].

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