Straw R C, Powers B E, Klausner J, Henderson R A, Morrison W B, McCaw D L, Harvey H J, Jacobs R M, Berg R J
Department of Clinical Science, College of Veterinary Medicine, Colorado State University, Fort Collins 80523, USA.
J Am Anim Hosp Assoc. 1996 May-Jun;32(3):257-62. doi: 10.5326/15473317-32-3-257.
Fifty-one dogs treated for mandibular osteosarcomas (OSs) were studied retrospectively. Treatments were partial mandibulectomy (n = 32); partial mandibulectomy and chemotherapy (n = 10); partial mandibulectomy and radiation therapy (n = 3); partial mandibulectomy, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy (n = 4); and radiation therapy alone (n = 2). The overall one-year survival rate was 59.3%. Dogs treated with surgery alone had a one-year survival rate of 71%, which is higher than the one-year survival rate for dogs with appendicular OSs treated with surgery alone (p of 0.001 or less; hazard ratio of 0.29). There was no apparent effect of various treatment modalities, nor institution where treatment was given, nor histological type. Histological score and, to a lesser extent, histological grade were predictive of survival outcome.