of osteosarcoma of the distal femur in a dog
Risk factors Osteosarcoma is the most common bone tumor in dogs and typically affects middle-aged large and giant breed dogs such as
Irish Wolfhounds,
Greyhounds,
German Shepherds,
Rottweilers, mountain breeds (Great Pyrenees, St. Bernard, Leonberger, Newfoundland),
Doberman Pinschers and
Great Danes. It has a 10-fold greater
incidence in dogs than humans. A
hereditary base has been shown in St. Bernard dogs.
Spayed/neutered dogs have twice the risk of intact ones to develop osteosarcoma. Infestation with the parasite
Spirocerca lupi can cause osteosarcoma of the
esophagus.
Clinical presentation The most commonly affected bones are the proximal
humerus, the distal
radius, the distal
femur, and the
tibia, following the basic premise "far from the elbow, close to the knee". Other sites include the ribs, the
mandible, the spine, and the pelvis. Rarely, osteosarcoma may arise from soft tissues (extraskeletal osteosarcoma).
Metastasis of tumors involving the limb bones is very common, usually to the lungs. The tumor causes a great deal of pain, and can even lead to fracture of the affected bone. As with human osteosarcoma, bone
biopsy is the definitive method to reach a final diagnosis. Osteosarcoma should be differentiated from other
bone tumours and a range of other lesions, such as
osteomyelitis. Differential diagnosis of the osteosarcoma of the skull in particular includes, among others,
chondrosarcoma and the
multilobular tumour of bone.
Treatment and prognosis Amputation is the initial treatment, although this alone will not prevent metastasis.
Chemotherapy combined with amputation improves the survival time, but most dogs still die within a year. Some current studies indicate
osteoclast inhibitors such as alendronate and pamidronate may have beneficial effects on the quality of life by reducing osteolysis, thus reducing the degree of pain, as well as the risk of
pathological fractures.
Molecular alterations Canine osteosarcoma shows similar patterns of molecular somatic alterations to the human disease. Both are characterized by genetic instability and karyotypic complexity and genes that are recurrently altered include
TP53, RB1, PTEN, MYC, PIK3CA. In contrast, mutations in the histone methyltransferase gene
SETD2 are rare in human osteosarcoma, but have been identified in 21% of canine tumors.
Cats Osteosarcoma is also the most common bone tumor in cats, although not as frequently encountered, and most typically affect the rear legs. The cancer is generally less aggressive in cats than in dogs, so amputation alone can lead to a significant survival time in many affected cats, though post-amputation chemotherapy is recommended when a high grade is confirmed on
histopathology. The bone showed typical characteristics of cancer, including areas of cortical destruction, neoplastic bone formations, and disordered organization inconsistent with a simple fracture or infection. The structural and histological similarities with a high-grade human osteosarcoma case strengthened the diagnosis. This study establishes that bone cancers, such as osteosarcoma, have deep roots in the evolutionary history of vertebrates. ==References==