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Treating
Cancer In The Teleost PatientScott Weber1, L. Boerner1, J. Mayer2,
J. Mateleska2, C. Weisse3, Z. Matzkin3, and A.
Klide3 1New England Aquarium; 2Tufts University; 3University of Pennsylvania, Schools of Veterinary Medicine Fish
are regularly used in environmental and chemical testing to detect and study
effects of mutagenic pollutants or compounds.
Similar to other vertebrates, a number of different tumors have been
isolated and identified in fish. Many of these tumors have been recorded in
Harshbarger’s Registry of Tumors in Lower Animals. Although the significance of tumorogenesis in fish has been
primarily of a scientific nature, in the last decade, veterinarians have begun
diagnosing and treating cancers in a variety of teleosts. The following presentation discusses
diagnostic and treatment options used in three specific cases: surgical removal
of a seminoma in a black sea bass, (Centropristis striata); cryosurgery for
squamous cell carcinoma in a kannume (Mormyrus kannume);
radiation, surgical, and cryosurgical intervention for a neurofibroma of a
goldfish (Carassius auratas).
Diagnostics for these cases included: survey radiography,
ultrasonography, positive-contrast radiography, hemotology, blood chemistry
analysis, histopathology, and computed tomography. One of the greatest
challenges for aquatic animal veterinarians is getting an early and quick
diagnosis. In the absence of other
clinical abnormalities or behavioral changes, abdominal masses are difficult to
detect until abdominal distension is observed.
Often, when abdominal distension is first observed, tumors have grown
substantially in size and may account for up to 35% or more of the animal’s
body weight. Other types of cancer,
such as lymphosarcoma, may only be readily detected towards the end stage of
metastatic disease. As more diagnostic
modalities are used, modified, and/or adapted for aquatic animal medicine,
earlier detection and diagnoses of cancers can be made for fish patients. Quicker diagnoses afford greater
availability and success of other oncologic treatment options, such as
chemotherapeutics, surgery, interventional radiology, and radiation
therapy. While surgical procedures are
performed more commonly on fish in research, few reports of clinical surgical
cases have been described in the literature.
These three cases show that aggressive treatment options are possible in
fish and that advances in oncology may be successfully applied in aquatic
animal medicine. Earlier detection and
increased case documentation should enhance the future success rate for cancer
treatment in teleosts.
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