Publication | Closed Access
Surgical treatment of mammary carcinomas in dogs with or without postoperative chemotherapy
91
Citations
34
References
2014
Year
Incomplete 70Postoperative ChemotherapySurgical OncologyIncomplete 68Mammary CarcinomasSurgical TreatmentMedicineVeterinary SurgeryVeterinary SciencePathologyComplete Surgical MarginsBreast CancerSurgeryCancer TreatmentBreast SurgeryOncologyRadiation Oncology
This retrospective study identified prognostic factors associated with survival; and compared survival data in 94 canine mammary carcinoma (MCA) dogs treated with surgery (n = 58), or surgery and adjunct chemotherapy (n = 36), and a subset of dogs with poor prognostic factors. On multivariate analysis independent predictors of median survival time (MST) were clinical stage, lymphatic invasion (LI; present 179 days; none 1098 days), ulceration (present 118 days; none 443 days) and surgical margins (incomplete 70 days; complete 872 days). Complete surgical margins were associated with MST in dogs with stages 1-3 MCA (incomplete 68 days; complete 1098 days) and dogs with LI (incomplete 70 days; complete 347 days). There was no statistically significant improvement in MST in dogs with advanced disease (stage 4 or LI) treated with adjunctive chemotherapy (chemotherapy 228 days; none 194 days); although five dogs with complete surgical margins that received mitoxantrone and carboplatin had a mean survival of 1139 days.
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