Biologic Behaviour

•mean age 8.5 years (range, 2-14 years)

•sex predilection: 60%-70% male

•sites: large intestine and mid-to-distal rectum

•gross appearance is variable:

•nodular (single or multiple)

•pedunculated (mid-to-distal rectum)

•annular constriction or obstruction (colon to mid-rectum)

•metastatic rate is highly variable depending on the study


Clinical Signs

•tenesmus, hematochezia, dyschezia, and rectal bleeding unassociated with defecation

•other signs can include vomiting, diarrhea, and weight loss

•hematochezia uncommon in mesenchymal tumors due to lack of mucosal involvement

•cecal tumors often present with collapse and septic peritonitis due to perforation


Diagnosis


Physical Examination

•cachexia is common

•abdominal mass is frequently palpable via either abdomen and rectal palpation

•other findings include dehydration and abdominal pain


Laboratory Tests

•anemia and leukocytosis reported but occur less commonly than small intestinal tumors


Contrast Radiography

•contrast radiographs: mural lesions include luminal filling defect, intestinal wall thickening, mucosal ulceration, abnormal positioning of intestinal loops and constricting annular lesions

•only 25% of large intestinal leiomyosarcoma required contrast studies for identification



From: Withrow SJ & MacEwen EG (eds): Small Animal Clinical Oncology (3rd ed).

Endoscopy

•endoscopy is recommended prior to definitive treatment

•biopsy samples should be interpreted histologically as cytologic misdiagnosis is common with intestinal ADC being misdiagnosed as either septic inflammation or LSA

•biopsy samples are often small and superficial resulting in false-negative diagnosis if lesion is either submucosal or associated with surface ulceration and necrosis


Exploratory Celiotomy

•definitive diagnosis with exploratory celiotomy and biopsy

•50% of large intestinal ADC are associated with annular constrictions


Treatment


Surgery

•debilitation and hypoproteinemia may complicate treatment

•exploratory celiotomy with resection and end-to-end anastomosis with 4-8 cm margins and serosal patching of anastomosis

•mesenteric and regional lymph nodes should be assessed ± aspirated


Chemotherapy

•no effective chemotherapy for ADC

 

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