| Literature DB >> 29865982 |
Adriana Margarita Regalado Ibarra1, Loïc Legendre1, John S Munday2.
Abstract
This case report describes a rare case of a persistent canine papillomavirus type 1 (CPV-1)-induced oral papilloma that underwent malignant transformation into an oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) in a 3-year-old Labrador retriever cross. Initially, the patient had multiple and multifocal verrucous lesions populating the oral cavity exclusively. The papillomas persisted despite multiple surgical ablations, azithromycin, interferon α-2b, alternative medicines, and off-label drug use of an immunostimulant. After 1 year and 6 months, an aggressive lesion developed at the level of the left mandibular first molar (309) and progressed to a well-differentiated invasive OSCC. The presence of CPV-1 DNA in the OSCC, and the known oncogenic abilities of CPV-1, suggests that this virus might have played a significant role in the emergence of the OSCC that ultimately led to the patient's euthanasia due to poor quality of life. This is the first well-documented case where OSCC has developed from an oral papilloma caused by CPV-1 in which the presence of coinfection by another papillomavirus was excluded by multiple polymerase chain reaction tests using various primers.Entities:
Keywords: canine papillomavirus type 1 (CPV-1); dog; malignant transformation; oncogenic virus; oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC); papilloma; persistent papilloma infection
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29865982 DOI: 10.1177/0898756418774575
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vet Dent ISSN: 0898-7564 Impact factor: 0.857