Original Research

Canine cutaneous neoplasms: prevalence and influence of age, sex and site on the presence and potential malignancy of cutaneous neoplasms in dogs from Zimbabwe

S. Mukaratirwa, J. Chipunza, S. Chitanga, M. Chimonyo, E. Bhebhe
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association | Vol 76, No 2 | a398 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/jsava.v76i2.398 | © 2005 S. Mukaratirwa, J. Chipunza, S. Chitanga, M. Chimonyo, E. Bhebhe | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 13 June 2005 | Published: 13 June 2005

About the author(s)

S. Mukaratirwa,
J. Chipunza,
S. Chitanga,
M. Chimonyo,
E. Bhebhe,

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Abstract

Histopathological examination was performed on cutaneous biopsies from 900 dogs with skin lesions from Zimbabwe, collected from 1996 to 2000. Clinical data were collected from medical records. Sixty per cent (540/900) of the cases were tumours and 40% (360/900) were non-neoplastic inflammatory or degenerative diseases. Thirty different histological types of tumour were diagnosed. The prevalence of epithelial, mesenchymal, lymphohistiocytic and melanocytic tumours was 39.4 %, 44.4 %, 7.4 % and 8.7 %, respectively. The 10 most common tumours, comprising 73.7% of all cutaneous neoplasms, were mast cell tumours, squamous cell carcinomas, perianal gland adenomas, lymphomas, benign melanomas, haemangiosarcomas, sebaceous gland adenomas, fibrosarcomas, lipomas and malignant melanomas. The prevalence of various neoplasms, age of affected dogs and sites of occurrence were similar to surveys in other countries, except that in Zimbabwe there was a greater prevalence of lymphomas and of tumours associated with increased exposure to ultraviolet light (squamous cell carcinomas, haemangiosarcomas and melanomas). For all classes of tumours the sex of the dog did not have any significant influence on the likelihood of developing a tumour. For a dog diagnosed with a tumour located on the trunk, the tumour was significantly more likely to be an epithelial tumour than a non-epithelial tumour. The occurrence of melanocytic tumours on the trunk was significantly lower than at other sites. Lymphohistiocytic tumours were 10 times more likely to occur at multiple locations as opposed to single locations.

Keywords

Canine Cutaneous Neoplasms; Malignancy; Odds Ratio; Prevalence; Zimbabwe

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