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Evaluation of Neoplasia, Treatments, and Survival in Lizard Species. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Neoplasia in lizards is under-researched, and a study reviewed medical records from the Exotic Species Cancer Research Alliance (ESCRA), identifying 55 lizards across 20 species and examining factors like prevalence, treatment outcomes, and species differences.
  • Statistical analyses revealed that certain lizard species, such as Komodo dragons and savannah monitors, faced higher mortality rates from neoplasia, while types of tumors like leukemia and chondrosarcoma were linked to specific outcomes.
  • Treatment strategies also played a role, with surgery and radiation showing associations with non-neoplastic deaths, and lizards not undergoing treatment facing greater risks from neoplastic causes.

Article Abstract

Neoplasia has been reported in lizards, but more research is needed to accurately document the prevalence and prognosis of the various known neoplasms that affect lizards. This study reviewed medical records from an online database, the Exotic Species Cancer Research Alliance (ESCRA), and reviewed published literature to determine the prevalence of neoplasia, malignancy, metastasis, treatment strategies, and outcomes by species and sex. Records from 55 individual lizards, 20 different species, and 37 different tumors were identified. In the literature, 219 lizards, 59 species, and 86 unique tumors were identified from 72 published case reports. Potential signalment factors such as age, sex, and species were evaluated to see if they affected case outcome. Additional factors including neoplasia type, presence of metastasis, and types of pursued treatments were also evaluated. Statistical analysis was performed to determine whether a factor was significantly associated with animal death due to the identified neoplasia or with animal survival or death due to other causes (non-neoplastic outcomes). Komodo dragons and savannah monitors were more likely to die from neoplasia compared to other lizard species. Cases where the status of metastasis was unknown were significantly associated with death due to neoplasia. Having an unknown status of male versus female was significantly associated with non-neoplastic outcomes of death. Leukemia and islet cell carcinoma were significantly associated with death due to neoplastic causes. Chondrosarcoma, myxosarcoma, osteosarcoma, and squamous cell carcinoma were significantly associated with non-neoplastic outcomes of death. Surgery alone and radiation therapy alone each were significantly associated with non-neoplastic outcomes of death, while lizards not receiving treatment were significantly associated with death due to neoplasia. Benign neoplasia was significantly associated with non-neoplastic outcomes of death. These results will aid in the improved diagnosis and management of neoplasia in lizard species, as well as expanding our understanding of prognostic indicators of neoplasia in lizards.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11117239PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani14101395DOI Listing

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