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Clinical and magnetic resonance imaging features, and pathological findings of spinal lymphoma in 27 cats

This multicentric retrospective study describes the clinical and MRI features and pathological studies of spinal lymphoma in 27 cats. MRI characteristics and their possible correlations with histopathological findings were studied. The most frequent neurological signs were rapidly progressive parapa...

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Autores principales: Lorenzo, Valentina, Ribeiro, João, Bernardini, Marco, Mínguez, Juan J., Moral, Meritxell, Blanco, Carlos, Loncarica, Tina, Gamito, Araceli, Pumarola, Martí
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9634727/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36337180
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.980414
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author Lorenzo, Valentina
Ribeiro, João
Bernardini, Marco
Mínguez, Juan J.
Moral, Meritxell
Blanco, Carlos
Loncarica, Tina
Gamito, Araceli
Pumarola, Martí
author_facet Lorenzo, Valentina
Ribeiro, João
Bernardini, Marco
Mínguez, Juan J.
Moral, Meritxell
Blanco, Carlos
Loncarica, Tina
Gamito, Araceli
Pumarola, Martí
author_sort Lorenzo, Valentina
collection PubMed
description This multicentric retrospective study describes the clinical and MRI features and pathological studies of spinal lymphoma in 27 cats. MRI characteristics and their possible correlations with histopathological findings were studied. The most frequent neurological signs were rapidly progressive paraparesis (62.9%) or paraplegia (22.2%). Bimodal age distribution was found with 40.7% of cats aged ≤2.5 years (63.6% of them FeLV positive), and 44.4% of cats aged ≥8 years (16.7% of them FeLV positive). Spinal lymphoma was generally presented on MRI as an ill-defined epidural focal lesion with moderate to severe spinal cord compression, expanding more than one vertebral body. MRI lesions were typically localized in the lumbar vertebral segment (p = 0.01), circumferential to the spinal cord (p = 0.04), hyperintense on T2-weighted sequences (p = 4.3e-06), and isointense on T1-weighted sequences (p = 8.9e-07). The degree and pattern of contrast enhancement were variable. Other morphological patterns included paravertebral masses with extension into the vertebral canal and lesions centered in the spinal nerve roots. Involvement of vertebrae and adjacent spinal soft tissues was present in 74% of cases when present vertebral involvement was characterized by cortical sparing. When follow-up MRI studies (n = 4) were performed after treatment new lesions of similar nature but different localizations and extension were observed. Confirmation of spinal lymphoma was performed by CSF analysis in 4/27 (14.8%) of cases, by FNA in 6/27 (22.2%) of cases, by surgical biopsy in 10/27 (37%) of cases, by FNA and surgical biopsy in 1/27 (3.7%) of cases, by CSF, FNA, surgical biopsy and postmorten examination in 1/27 (3.7%) of cases, and postmorten studies in 5/27 (18.5%) of cases. Antemortem diagnosis was achieved in 22/27 (81.5%) cats. The presence of necrosis in histopathological studies as an unfavorable prognostic indicator of survival was significantly more probable when lesions were not hyperintense on T2-weighted sequences (p = 0.017). Spinal lymphoma in cats is a complex entity with heterogeneous imaging and histopathological appearance. However, certain MRI features may support a tentative diagnosis, which in a group of cases can be confirmed when combined with the CSF findings. For the rest of the cases, tissue sampling assisted by imaging findings remains necessary for definitive diagnosis.
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spelling pubmed-96347272022-11-05 Clinical and magnetic resonance imaging features, and pathological findings of spinal lymphoma in 27 cats Lorenzo, Valentina Ribeiro, João Bernardini, Marco Mínguez, Juan J. Moral, Meritxell Blanco, Carlos Loncarica, Tina Gamito, Araceli Pumarola, Martí Front Vet Sci Veterinary Science This multicentric retrospective study describes the clinical and MRI features and pathological studies of spinal lymphoma in 27 cats. MRI characteristics and their possible correlations with histopathological findings were studied. The most frequent neurological signs were rapidly progressive paraparesis (62.9%) or paraplegia (22.2%). Bimodal age distribution was found with 40.7% of cats aged ≤2.5 years (63.6% of them FeLV positive), and 44.4% of cats aged ≥8 years (16.7% of them FeLV positive). Spinal lymphoma was generally presented on MRI as an ill-defined epidural focal lesion with moderate to severe spinal cord compression, expanding more than one vertebral body. MRI lesions were typically localized in the lumbar vertebral segment (p = 0.01), circumferential to the spinal cord (p = 0.04), hyperintense on T2-weighted sequences (p = 4.3e-06), and isointense on T1-weighted sequences (p = 8.9e-07). The degree and pattern of contrast enhancement were variable. Other morphological patterns included paravertebral masses with extension into the vertebral canal and lesions centered in the spinal nerve roots. Involvement of vertebrae and adjacent spinal soft tissues was present in 74% of cases when present vertebral involvement was characterized by cortical sparing. When follow-up MRI studies (n = 4) were performed after treatment new lesions of similar nature but different localizations and extension were observed. Confirmation of spinal lymphoma was performed by CSF analysis in 4/27 (14.8%) of cases, by FNA in 6/27 (22.2%) of cases, by surgical biopsy in 10/27 (37%) of cases, by FNA and surgical biopsy in 1/27 (3.7%) of cases, by CSF, FNA, surgical biopsy and postmorten examination in 1/27 (3.7%) of cases, and postmorten studies in 5/27 (18.5%) of cases. Antemortem diagnosis was achieved in 22/27 (81.5%) cats. The presence of necrosis in histopathological studies as an unfavorable prognostic indicator of survival was significantly more probable when lesions were not hyperintense on T2-weighted sequences (p = 0.017). Spinal lymphoma in cats is a complex entity with heterogeneous imaging and histopathological appearance. However, certain MRI features may support a tentative diagnosis, which in a group of cases can be confirmed when combined with the CSF findings. For the rest of the cases, tissue sampling assisted by imaging findings remains necessary for definitive diagnosis. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-10-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9634727/ /pubmed/36337180 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.980414 Text en Copyright © 2022 Lorenzo, Ribeiro, Bernardini, Mínguez, Moral, Blanco, Loncarica, Gamito and Pumarola. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Veterinary Science
Lorenzo, Valentina
Ribeiro, João
Bernardini, Marco
Mínguez, Juan J.
Moral, Meritxell
Blanco, Carlos
Loncarica, Tina
Gamito, Araceli
Pumarola, Martí
Clinical and magnetic resonance imaging features, and pathological findings of spinal lymphoma in 27 cats
title Clinical and magnetic resonance imaging features, and pathological findings of spinal lymphoma in 27 cats
title_full Clinical and magnetic resonance imaging features, and pathological findings of spinal lymphoma in 27 cats
title_fullStr Clinical and magnetic resonance imaging features, and pathological findings of spinal lymphoma in 27 cats
title_full_unstemmed Clinical and magnetic resonance imaging features, and pathological findings of spinal lymphoma in 27 cats
title_short Clinical and magnetic resonance imaging features, and pathological findings of spinal lymphoma in 27 cats
title_sort clinical and magnetic resonance imaging features, and pathological findings of spinal lymphoma in 27 cats
topic Veterinary Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9634727/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36337180
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.980414
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