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Comparison of 2- and 3-category histologic grading systems for predicting the presence of metastasis at the time of initial evaluation in dogs with cutaneous mast cell tumors: 386 cases (2009–2014)

Authors :
Damiano Stefanello
T. J. Scase
Mary Marrington
Maria Elisabetta Vasconi
Monica Mazzola
Paolo Buracco
Maurizio Annoni
Marina Martano
Roberta Ferrari
Chiara Giudice
Stefano Di Palma
Laura Marconato
Massimiliano Tursi
Riccardo Finotello
Valeria Grieco
Silvia Sabattini
Giuliano Bettini
Francesca Gattino
Selina Iussich
Stefanello, Damiano
Buracco, Paolo
Sabattini, Silvia
Finotello, Riccardo
Giudice, Chiara
Grieco, Valeria
Iussich, Selina
Tursi, Massimiliano
Scase, Timothy
Di Palma, Stefano
Bettini, Giuliano
Ferrari, Roberta
Martano, Marina
Gattino, Francesca
Marrington, Mary
Mazzola, Monica
Vasconi, Maria Elisabetta
Annoni, Maurizio
Marconato, Laura
Source :
ResearcherID, Scopus-Elsevier
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Objective—To compare the Kiupel (2 categories) and Patnaik (3 categories) histologic grading systems for predicting the presence of metastasis at the time of initial examination in dogs with cutaneous mast cell tumors (MCTs). Design—Retrospective case series. Animals—386 client-owned dogs with cutaneous MCTs. Procedures—Medical records of dogs with newly diagnosed, histologically confirmed cutaneous MCTs that had undergone complete clinical staging were reviewed for clinical and histopathologic data. Results—All Patnaik grade 1 MCTs (n = 52) were classified as Kiupel low-grade MCTs, and all Patnaik grade 3 MCTs (43) were classified as Kiupel high-grade MCTs. Of the 291 Patnaik grade 2 MCTs, 243 (83.5%) were classified as Kiupel low-grade tumors, and 48 (16.5%) were classified as Kiupel high-grade MCTs. Dogs with Patnaik grade 3 MCTs were significantly more likely to have metastases at the time of initial examination than were dogs with grade 1 or 2 MCTs (OR, 5.46), and dogs with Kiupel high-grade MCTs were significantly more likely to have metastases than were dogs with Kiupel low-grade MCTs (OR, 2.54). However, 3 of 52 (5.8%) dogs with Patnaik grade 1 tumors, 48 of 291 (16.5%) dogs with Patnaik grade 2 tumors, and 44 of 295 (14.9%) dogs with Kiupel low-grade tumors had metastatic disease. Conclusions and Clinical Relevance—Findings indicated that in dogs with cutaneous MCTs, prognostication should not rely on histologic grade alone, regardless of grading system used, but should take into account results of clinical staging.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ResearcherID, Scopus-Elsevier
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f10df5c73bf89c2fdbd320c9b2a379bf