Successful treatment of early cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma with hypofractionated radiation therapy in an African lion (Panthera leo)

Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is a slow growing but locally invasive neoplasm, most commonly caused by prolonged exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation. Whilst SCC accounts for 15% of skin tumours in domesticated cats, cutaneous SCC in non-domesticated felids (apart from captive snow leopa...

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Main Authors: Louise van der Weyden, Nicolize O'Dell, Alida Avenant, Paolo Pazzi, Katja N. Koeppel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2021-06-01
Series:Journal of the South African Veterinary Association
Subjects:
uv
Online Access:https://jsava.co.za/index.php/jsava/article/view/2134
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spelling doaj-590f073bf36c4ef18ab59f8ed1fefbc62021-07-02T08:43:31ZengAOSISJournal of the South African Veterinary Association1019-91282224-94352021-06-01920e1e610.4102/jsava.v92i0.21341460Successful treatment of early cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma with hypofractionated radiation therapy in an African lion (Panthera leo)Louise van der Weyden0Nicolize O'Dell1Alida Avenant2Paolo Pazzi3Katja N. Koeppel4Wellcome Genome Institute, Wellcome Sanger Campus, CambridgeDepartment of Paraclinical Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, Onderstepoort, South Africa; and, Centre for Veterinary Wildlife Studies, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, OnderstepoortDepartment of Paraclinical Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, OnderstepoortDepartment of Companion Animal Studies, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, OnderstepoortCentre for Veterinary Wildlife Studies, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, Onderstepoort, South Africa; and, Production Animal Science, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, OnderstepoortCutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is a slow growing but locally invasive neoplasm, most commonly caused by prolonged exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation. Whilst SCC accounts for 15% of skin tumours in domesticated cats, cutaneous SCC in non-domesticated felids (apart from captive snow leopards) appears to be uncommon, with only three reports in the literature to date. In this report, a captive African lion (Panthera leo) presented with two ulcerative lesions on the nasal planum. Histopathology of the lesions revealed epidermal keratinocyte dysplasia and neoplastic basal- and supra-basal epithelial cells with dyskeratosis and evidence of basement membrane breaching and dermal invasion, consistent with a diagnosis of SCC. There was also evidence of laminar fibrosis and inflammation of the subjacent dermis suggesting that the SCC most likely resulted from UV-induced neoplastic transformation of the epidermal squamous epithelium following actinic keratosis. The lion was treated with hypofractionated radiation therapy and remained in remission until his death (euthanised 17 months later because of age-related chronic renal failure). This is the first report of cutaneous SCC in a lion with evidence of actinic damage and resolution after radiation therapy.https://jsava.co.za/index.php/jsava/article/view/2134lionskincancerradiation therapyactinic damagelaminar fibrosisuv
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Louise van der Weyden
Nicolize O'Dell
Alida Avenant
Paolo Pazzi
Katja N. Koeppel
spellingShingle Louise van der Weyden
Nicolize O'Dell
Alida Avenant
Paolo Pazzi
Katja N. Koeppel
Successful treatment of early cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma with hypofractionated radiation therapy in an African lion (Panthera leo)
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association
lion
skin
cancer
radiation therapy
actinic damage
laminar fibrosis
uv
author_facet Louise van der Weyden
Nicolize O'Dell
Alida Avenant
Paolo Pazzi
Katja N. Koeppel
author_sort Louise van der Weyden
title Successful treatment of early cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma with hypofractionated radiation therapy in an African lion (Panthera leo)
title_short Successful treatment of early cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma with hypofractionated radiation therapy in an African lion (Panthera leo)
title_full Successful treatment of early cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma with hypofractionated radiation therapy in an African lion (Panthera leo)
title_fullStr Successful treatment of early cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma with hypofractionated radiation therapy in an African lion (Panthera leo)
title_full_unstemmed Successful treatment of early cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma with hypofractionated radiation therapy in an African lion (Panthera leo)
title_sort successful treatment of early cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma with hypofractionated radiation therapy in an african lion (panthera leo)
publisher AOSIS
series Journal of the South African Veterinary Association
issn 1019-9128
2224-9435
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is a slow growing but locally invasive neoplasm, most commonly caused by prolonged exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation. Whilst SCC accounts for 15% of skin tumours in domesticated cats, cutaneous SCC in non-domesticated felids (apart from captive snow leopards) appears to be uncommon, with only three reports in the literature to date. In this report, a captive African lion (Panthera leo) presented with two ulcerative lesions on the nasal planum. Histopathology of the lesions revealed epidermal keratinocyte dysplasia and neoplastic basal- and supra-basal epithelial cells with dyskeratosis and evidence of basement membrane breaching and dermal invasion, consistent with a diagnosis of SCC. There was also evidence of laminar fibrosis and inflammation of the subjacent dermis suggesting that the SCC most likely resulted from UV-induced neoplastic transformation of the epidermal squamous epithelium following actinic keratosis. The lion was treated with hypofractionated radiation therapy and remained in remission until his death (euthanised 17 months later because of age-related chronic renal failure). This is the first report of cutaneous SCC in a lion with evidence of actinic damage and resolution after radiation therapy.
topic lion
skin
cancer
radiation therapy
actinic damage
laminar fibrosis
uv
url https://jsava.co.za/index.php/jsava/article/view/2134
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AT nicolizeodell successfultreatmentofearlycutaneoussquamouscellcarcinomawithhypofractionatedradiationtherapyinanafricanlionpantheraleo
AT alidaavenant successfultreatmentofearlycutaneoussquamouscellcarcinomawithhypofractionatedradiationtherapyinanafricanlionpantheraleo
AT paolopazzi successfultreatmentofearlycutaneoussquamouscellcarcinomawithhypofractionatedradiationtherapyinanafricanlionpantheraleo
AT katjankoeppel successfultreatmentofearlycutaneoussquamouscellcarcinomawithhypofractionatedradiationtherapyinanafricanlionpantheraleo
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