Osteoinductive squamous cell carcinoma associated with a putative novel papillomavirus on the digit of a cat

Authors: Munday JS, Dunbar ME, Wightman P, Piripi S
Publication: New Zealand Veterinary Journal, Volume 72, Issue 2, pp 112-117, Mar 2024
Publisher: Taylor and Francis

Animal type: Cat
Article class: Research Article
Abstract:

Case history and clinical findings: An approximately 10-year-old, castrated male domestic short-haired cat developed swelling and ulceration of the second digit of the right front paw. Radiographs revealed a spherical soft tissue swelling with irregular distal margins that contained multiple lacy mineral opacities. The digit was amputated and submitted for histology. No recurrence has been observed 7 months after amputation.

Pathological and molecular findings: Histology revealed a moderately well-circumscribed proliferation of well-differentiated squamous cells arranged in trabeculae and nests. Numerous thin spicules of osseous metaplasia were visible throughout the neoplasm. Around 70% of the neoplastic cells contained papillomavirus-induced cell changes including large amphophilic cytoplasmic bodies and cells with shrunken nuclei surrounded by a clear halo. Intense p16CDKN2A protein immunostaining was visible within the neoplastic cells, suggesting papillomavirus-induced changes in cell regulation. A DNA sequence from a putative novel Taupapillomavirus type was amplified from the neoplasm.

Diagnosis: Osteoinductive squamous cell carcinoma associated with a putative novel papillomavirus type.

Clinical relevance: The findings in this case increase the number of papillomavirus types known to infect cats, and the squamous cell carcinoma had histological features that have not been previously reported. The neoplasm was not as invasive as is typical for a squamous cell carcinoma and excision appeared curative. This is the first report of an osteoinductive squamous cell carcinoma of the skin of cats and the neoplasm had a unique radiographic appearance.

KEYWORDS: Cat, papillomavirus, novel virus, neoplasia, skin, squamous cell carcinoma, dermatology


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