Literature DB >> 14608019

Glioblastoma multiforme: clinical findings, magnetic resonance imaging, and pathology in five dogs.

D Lipsitz1, R J Higgins, G D Kortz, P J Dickinson, A W Bollen, D K Naydan, R A LeCouteur.   

Abstract

Although glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), a World Health Organization grade IV astrocytoma, is the most common primary brain tumor in humans, in dogs GBM is relatively rare, accounting for only about 5% of all astrocytomas. This study presents combined clinical, neuroimaging, and neuropathologic findings in five dogs with GBM. The five dogs, aged from 5 to 12 years, were presented with progressive neurologic deficits that subsequent clinical neurologic examination and neuroimaging studies by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), localized to space occupying lesions in the brain. MRI features of the tumors included consistent peritumoral edema (n = 5), sharp borders (n = 4), ring enhancement (n = 3), heterogenous T2-weighted signal intensity (n = 3), iso- to hypointense T1-weighted images (n = 5), necrosis (n = 5), and cyst formation (n = 2). Two tumors were diagnosed clinically using a computed tomography-guided stereotactic biopsy procedure. At necropsy all the tumors resulted in, on transverse sections, a prominent midline shift and had a variegated appearance due to intratumoral necrosis and hemorrhage. Histologically, they had serpentine necrosis with glial cell pseudopalisading and microvascular proliferation, features which distinguish human GBM from grade III astrocytomas. Immunoreactivity of tumor cells for glial fibrillary acidic protein was strongly positive in all cases, whereas 60% and 40% of the tumors also expressed epidermal growth factor receptor and vascular endothelial growth factor, respectively. These canine GBMs shared many diagnostic neuroimaging, gross, microcopic, and immunoreactivity features similar to those of human GBMs.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14608019     DOI: 10.1354/vp.40-6-659

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vet Pathol        ISSN: 0300-9858            Impact factor:   2.221


  40 in total

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9.  Human Flt3L generates dendritic cells from canine peripheral blood precursors: implications for a dog glioma clinical trial.

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10.  ZIP4 is a novel molecular marker for glioma.

Authors:  Yi Lin; Yong Chen; Yongzhi Wang; Jingxuan Yang; Vivian F Zhu; Yulun Liu; Xiaobo Cui; Leon Chen; Wei Yan; Tao Jiang; Georgene W Hergenroeder; Stephen A Fletcher; Jonathan M Levine; Dong H Kim; Nitin Tandon; Jay-Jiguang Zhu; Min Li
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