AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the effectiveness of the double two-thirds rule for diagnosing splenic hemangiosarcoma in dogs experiencing nontraumatic hemoperitoneum due to a ruptured splenic mass.
  • A systematic literature review identified 14 relevant articles from 2,390, with findings indicating that 73% of the 1,150 dogs studied had malignant lesions, predominantly hemangiosarcoma (87.3%).
  • Recommendations suggest refining the double two-thirds rule as it underestimates the likelihood of malignancies, highlighting a need for more rigorous future research with improved evidence and reduced bias.

Article Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the validity of the double two-thirds rule for a diagnosis of splenic hemangiosarcoma in dogs with nontraumatic hemoperitoneum due to a ruptured splenic mass.

Sample: Systematic literature review.

Procedures: 3 databases (PubMed, CAB abstracts, and World of Science) were searched in November 2020. Articles were included if data on dogs with nontraumatic hemoperitoneum due to a splenic mass were included and subsequent pathologic diagnosis could be determined.

Results: In total, 2,390 unique articles were identified, with 66 articles meeting the criteria for full-text review and 14 articles included for analysis. A total of 1,150 dogs were evaluated, with 73.0% (840/1,150) of dogs being diagnosed with a malignant splenic lesion and 27.0% (310/1,150) being diagnosed with a benign splenic lesion. Of the malignancies, 87.3% (733/840) were hemangiosarcoma. Levels of evidence were low, and bias was high as most included studies were retrospective case series.

Clinical Relevance: The double two-thirds rule should be refined when evaluating dogs with nontraumatic hemoperitoneum from a ruptured splenic mass, with more dogs being diagnosed with a malignancy and hemangiosarcoma specifically than the double two-thirds rule indicates. These findings may be useful in an emergency setting to guide owners on potential diagnoses for dogs with nontraumatic hemoperitoneum due to a ruptured splenic mass. However, there remains a portion of these dogs with benign conditions and nonhemangiosarcoma malignancies that may have a good long-term prognosis compared to dogs with hemangiosarcoma. Studies with higher levels of evidence, lower risks of bias, and large case numbers are needed in the literature.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2460/javma.22.08.0389DOI Listing

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