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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Four Cases of the Melanotic Variant of Malignant Nerve Sheath Tumour: a Rare, Aggressive Neoplasm in Young Dogs with a Predilection for the Spinal Cord.

Journal:
Journal of comparative pathology
Year:
2020
Authors:
Warren, A L et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Veterinary Clinical and Diagnostic Sciences · Canada
Species:
dog

Abstract

Four cases of a rare melanotic variant of malignant nerve sheath tumour (MNST) in dogs are described. All four cases presented with neurological clinical signs due to multicentric, intradural, intra- and extraparenchymal neoplasms that surrounded the spinal and cranial nerves and infiltrated the adjacent spinal cord and brain. The dogs were young (3 months to 3 years of age), all were female and four different breeds were represented. Characteristic histological features were interweaving fascicles of spindle-shaped cells, sometimes with an architecture reminiscent of Antoni A and B patterns. Some spindle cells showed prominent cytoplasmic melanin pigmentation and such cells were positive by Masson-Fontana stain. Immunohistochemistry performed in three cases was positive for S100 and vimentin, strongly positive for melan A in the melanized cells and negative for glial fibrillary acidic protein and periaxin. Non-melanized cells did not express melan A. Transmission electron microscopy findings in one case were consistent with a peripheral nerve sheath tumour and demonstrated cytoplasmic pre-melanosomes and melanosomes. Melanotic variants of MNSTs are rare in animals with only a solitary report of two previous canine cases in the literature.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32800101/