Background: Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is a neoplastic disease of the squamous epithelial cells that has been rarely
described in the literature. This neoplasm affects the eyelid, conjunctiva and third eyelid, as well as the cornea. Corneal SCC
is a neoplastic lesion characterized by a pink, typically irregular mass protruding from the epithelial surface of the cornea.
Canine corneal SCC has been associated with chronic keratoconjunctivitis sicca, or keratitis secondary to exophthalmia and
is common in humans, horses and cows. The treatment is surgical with excision of the lesion of the ocular surface. This paper
reported a study of a dog with corneal SCC, which was successfully treated with a superficial lamellar keratectomy excision
combined with cryosurgery.
Case: An 8-year-old male English bulldog was presented for the evaluation of a red mass on its left eye that had progressively
grown over a 1-year period. The mass was approximately 6mm in diameter and it was elevated from 3 to 4 mm above the
corneal surface with no expansion onto bulbar conjunctiva. At physical examination it was normal except for the ocular
disease. A complete blood cell count and serum chemical profiles were unremarkable. The radiographic evaluation did not
demonstrate any evidence of metastasis. The mass was excised by a superficial lamellar keratectomy and the surgical bed was
frozen with nitrous oxide. The surgical procedures consisted in excising a rim of grossly normal conjunctiva with 2mm along
the mass that was sent for histopathological examination. The postoperative measures included the administration of topical
tobramycin at 0.3%, four times a day, and systemic carprofen 4 mg/kg, daily, for 5 days. A reexamination was performed after
14, 21, 30, 42, 70 and 180 days postoperatively. When the cornea was healed, topical dexamethasone at 1% was prescribed,
twice a day for 2 weeks to control an excessive vascularization at the limbus. In 70 days, the postoperative result was very
satisfactory and there was no evidence of ocular inflammation. Two years after the surgical procedure the dog had not developed
metastasis or recorrence of the ocular neoplasm.
Discussion: Ocular or adnexal SCC in animals and humans is suspected to be a result of the chronic effect of ultraviolet light
on the epithelium. Also, in dogs the SCC has been associated with a chronic source of irritation. The dog observed in our study
was brachycephalic, with natural exophthalmic eyes and oversized palpebral fissures that may have caused excessive and
chronic corneal exposure to solar radiation. The treatment of choice was excision of the lesion with a wide surgical margin,
because it is the standard treatment for SCC of the cornea and cryotherapy has been a common modality of treatment. A
histological examination revealed islands and nests of pleomorphic epithelial cells and keratin pearls and the diagnosis of the
corneal SCC was made. No evidence of metastasis or recurrence has been found since the surgical procedure. Although,
recurrence rates following the excision of this neoplasm of the ocular surface ranged an average of 30%. The treatment of the
neoplasm was successful in both procedures, once no visible evidence of regrowth presented two years after the keratectomy.
Despite being a rare entity, squamous cell carcinoma of cornea should be considered as differential diagnosis in dogs with any
corneal mass.