WHAT IS IT?
Bone cancer can strike relatively young dogs, even as young
as 5 years.
While it can affect any bone in the body, 75% to 85% of
these cancers are found on the legs at the shoulder, wrist or knee joints as
shown in the illustration.
The disease begins inside the bone, initially causing an
intermittent lameness but eventually causing constant, deep and severe pain
after just a short period (1-3 months, most likely). The bone weakens and can eventually break
with minimal trauma or pressure (a "pathological" fracture).
The following x-rays illustrate the bone changes caused by
osteosarcoma
HOW IS IT DIAGNOSED?
Your vet will very likely recommend an x-ray to distinguish
the different causes. Depending on the
stage of the osteosarcoma, the x-ray itself can be diagnostic. Early cases may be more ambiguous and require
a follow-up x-ray in a few weeks.
If there is doubt, the definitive diagnosis can usually be
obtained through bone biopsy. Other diseases causing similar changes on an
x-ray include some bone infections, other types of bone tumors, and fungal
infections of the bone.
CAN IT BE TREATED?
Osteosarcoma is a terrible disease and managing it requires
a strong commitment, both financially and emotionally.
Treatment addresses two aspects of the disease: the pain and
the cancer itself. The pain of bone
cancer is thought to be greater than almost any other disease, and it is
continuous, non-stop, relentless, and never-ending. Even the strongest pain medications can fail
to control this kind of pain, so it is imperative that you and your vet
aggressively manage this part of the disease. Together, you must recognize when
pain is no longer controlled, so you can make an appropriate quality-of-life
decision.
TREATMENT OPTIONS
Medical pain relief only - combinations of pain medications
to control pain, followed by euthanasia when they fail to do so. The caution
here is the difficulty in objectively judging pain. It's hard to know how much our pets are
really suffering, and it's easy to think because they don't scream, they don't
hurt. MOST DOGS SUFFER SEVERE PAIN IN
SILENCE. With this treatment option,
life expectancy is 4 months, although pain control may well fail long before
that. You must find the courage to face
appropriate timing of euthanasia.
Amputation and pain relief - while seemingly drastic,
amputation provides pain relief to 100% of the dogs who receive it. With amputation alone, the life expectancy
remains at an average of 4 months, but the quality of life is improved.
Amputation and chemotherapy - this improves the life
expectancy, although does not cure the disease.
With this the average life expectancy is 1 year.
Limb sparing surgery - a new technique adapted from human
medicine and done at some referral centers.
The cancerous bone is removed and replace with grafted bone, and the
nearest joint is fused. This is only
done on the wrist area at this time.
Radiotherapy to control pain - the tumor is irradiated and
this can provide about 4 months of pain relief in about 65% of the patients.
Euthanasia - eventually it is likely that treatment will
fail, the pain will overcome your Greyhound again, and the cancer will prevail.
When that day comes, the final gift you can give your pet is to relieve him/her
of an impossible struggle. Euthanasia is
the beginning of your grief, but it is the end of their suffering, and with
this disease it is something that must be faced.
THE FUTURE
Studies are underway to try to understand and treat this disease
more effectively. One aspect of this is
a genetic study being done at the University of Michigan. If your Greyhound develops osteosarcoma,
please consider the donation a small blood sample to this study. We need all the information we can get to eventually
be able to cure these cancer victims.
1 comment:
Could you post more information regatding donating a blood sample, how to do so, where to send, etc. This grievous process lacks much information for owners. I feel failed by my veterinarians, surgeons, and the pathology we have been through...despite financial and emotional commitment and expense...
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