Pulmonary Neoplasia

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LUNGS



Classification

  • Although metastatic pulmonary tumours are common in the lung, primary pulmonary tumours are relatively rare in domestic animals (cf. humans)
  • However, primary tumours are more common in dogs and cats than in other animals
  • Classification of pulmonary tumours can be difficult due to the metaplasia which can occur in both inflammation and in neoplasia
    • Bronchial papilloma
    • Bronchial adenoma/ carcinoma (arising from major airways)
    • Bronchioloalveolar adenoma/ carcinoma (arising from small airways or alveolar parenchyma - either secretory bronchiolar cells or type II epithelial cells)
    • Carcinoid: in humans, these tumours arise from neuroendocrine cells - rare in animals


Primary tumours

Pulmonary carcinoma and emphysema (Image sourced from Bristol Biomed Image Archive with permission)
Adenomatosis (Image sourced from Bristol Biomed Image Archive with permission)
Alveolar cell carcinoma (Image sourced from Bristol Biomed Image Archive with permission)
  • Most arise from pulmonary epithelium
  • Usually middle aged to old dogs and cats


Bronchogenic carcinoma

  • In dogs usually invasive bronchogenic carcinomas mostly arising from hilar region an metastasise via the airways to other parts of the lungs
  • Types:
    • Squamous cell - large cells with vesicular nuclei
    • Adenocarcinoma - invasive and destructive, least malignant
    • Adenosquamous carcinoma - both squamous and glandular part in one tumour, common, similar to metastatic
    • Undifferentiated - very rare in animals
  • Large, irregular, pale, not well defined border
  • Spread through pulmonary lymphatics


Bronchioloalveolar tumours

  • Most common in dogs
  • Arise from either secretory bronchiolar or alveolar type II epithelial cells, often both types in same tumour
  • May be an incidental necropsy finding
  • Often occur as solitary nodules at the periphery of the lung, occasionally multiple
  • Histologically:
    • Regular alveolar pattern
  • May resemble chronic inflammation or rapid metastatic spread of tumour from a primary elsewhere in the body


Sheep pulmonary adenomatosis (SPA/ Jaagsiekte)

  • Also called pulmonary carcinomatosis
  • Infectious bronchiolar-alveolar carcinoma caused by a retrovirus
  • Commonest under intensive management systems which favour aerosol transmission and close contact of disease
  • Behaves like chronic pneumonia
  • Takes months to years to express itself clinically as coughing and exercise intolerance
  • Gross pathology:
    • Heavy lungs which fail to collapse
    • The lesions progress from small firm grey/white nodular lesions to extensive confluent areas with replacement by neoplastic tissue
    • Cut surface oozes fluid
    • There is often coexistent infection present
    • Occasional metastases to bronchial and mediastinal lymph nodes can occur
  • Histopathology:
    • Widespread proliferation of alveolar (Type 2) and terminal bronchiolar epithelium, lining the alveoli and lower airways
    • Multiple neoplastic foci of cuboidal/columnar cells forming papillary projections into the lumen
    • Metastases of the same in the bronchial and mediastinal lymph nodes
  • There is no serological test, and diagnosis depends upon raising the animal by the hind limbs whereupon a clear fluid issues from the nose = "Wheelbarrow test"


Carcinoids

  • Occasionally occur in animals, mainly in humans
  • Originate from neuroendocrine components of major airways
  • Microscopically:
    • Large number of small secretory granules


Granular cell tumours

  • Also called myoblastomas
  • Mesenchymal origin
  • Occurs in horses
  • Grossly:
    • Multiple discrete of partially confluent nodules
    • Tend to be associated with major bronchi
    • May cause obstruction
  • Histologically:
    • Large polyhedral cells aggregation
    • Fibrovascular stroma

Lymphomatoid granulomatosis

  • Occurs in dogs
  • Histologically:
    • Mixed, atypical lymphoreticular cells infiltrating one or more lung lobes
    • Tend to invade blood vessel walls and airways
    • Fibrous stroma
    • Many mitotic figures


Metastatic tumours

Lung carcinoma in a dog (Image sourced from Bristol Biomed Image Archive with permission)
Metastatic fibrosarcoma in canine lung (Image sourced from Bristol Biomed Image Archive with permission)
Metastatic sweat gland carcinoma in feline lung (Image sourced from Bristol Biomed Image Archive with permission)
  • All are malignant by definition
  • Relatively common in domestic species
  • Examples of common metastatic tumours include :
    • Mammary carcinoma (dog and cat)
    • Haemangiosarcomas
    • Osteosarcomas
    • Uterine adenocarcinoma (cattle)
    • Malignant melanoma (horse)
  • Often manifest as multiple nodules scattered throughout the parenchyma - these lesions are often referred to as "cannon-ball" metastases, in all lung lobes
  • Histological examination usually shows the metastases to resemble the primary tumour however they may be either better or less well differentiated
  • Sometimes the metastasis can be sen only microscopically, grossly the lungs are discoloured and more firm than usual
  • Disseminate widely through lymphatics


  • In horses
    • cranial mediastinal lymphosarcoma
    • pulmonary granular cell tumour
    • malignant melanoma
    • haemangiosarcoma
    • metastatic adenocarcinoma
    • metastatic carcinoma




A space occupying lesion in the canine lung may produce periosteal thickening of the long bone - Hypertrophic Osteopathy