1. Equine intraocular melanocytic neoplasia.
- Author
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Labelle AL, Gemensky Metzler AM, McMullen RJ Jr, Wiggans KT, Labelle P, and Hamor RE
- Subjects
- Horses, Animals, Retrospective Studies, Male, Female, Skin Neoplasms veterinary, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Horse Diseases pathology, Melanoma veterinary, Melanoma pathology, Eye Neoplasms veterinary, Eye Neoplasms pathology, Eye Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: To describe the clinical appearance, histopathology, and treatment of equine intraocular melanocytic neoplasia in adult horses., Animals and Procedure: A retrospective review of medical records was conducted. Data recorded included signalment, ocular examination findings, physical examination findings, therapeutic interventions, and case outcomes. Histopathologic characteristics of enucleated globes were evaluated. A Student's t -test was used to evaluate differences in the interval from diagnosis to last known outcome between horses receiving therapeutic interventions and horses undergoing monitoring alone., Results: Of the 55 horses included, Arabian was the most common breed (15/55, 27%). Gray was the most common coat color (85%). Physical examination was completed for 75% of horses at time of diagnosis, and of those, 67% had cutaneous melanoma. The interval from diagnosis to last known outcome was not different ( P = 0.312) between horses that underwent monitoring alone (median: 2.0 y) and those that received treatment (mean: 2.25 y)., Conclusion: Equine intraocular melanocytic neoplasms are highly associated with cutaneous melanoma and gray coat color, and they are more prevalent than previously published reports suggest., Clinical Relevance: A complete ophthalmic examination is indicated for all horses with cutaneous melanoma. Additional research into the timing and rationale for treatment of intraocular melanocytic neoplasia is necessary., (Copyright and/or publishing rights held by the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association.)
- Published
- 2024