Animals (Feb 2024)

Ectopic Pregnancy and T-Cell Lymphoma in a Eurasian Red Squirrel (<i>Sciurus vulgaris</i>): Possible Comorbidity and a Comparative Pathology Perspective

  • Caterina Raso,
  • Valentina Galietta,
  • Claudia Eleni,
  • Marco Innocenti,
  • Niccolò Fonti,
  • Tiziana Palmerini,
  • Mauro Grillo,
  • Pietro Calderini,
  • Elena Borgogni

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani14050731
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 5
p. 731

Abstract

Read online

Ectopic pregnancy (EP) is a life-threatening disease that affects humans and other mammals. Tumors causing ruptures of the reproductive tract have been identified as possible predisposing factors in human and veterinary medicine. We here describe a case of concomitant ectopic pregnancy and lymphoma in a Eurasian red squirrel found deceased in Italy and submitted to the public health laboratory Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale del Lazio e della Toscana (IZSLT) for post-mortem examination. A full-term partially mummified ectopic fetus in the abdomen and a large fibrinonecrotic tubal scar adjacent to the right ovary were observed at necropsy. The tubal scar is likely the point of tubal rupture through which the fetus displaced. Histology revealed the presence of neoplastic cells referable to lymphoma infiltrating the ovary, spleen, small intestine, heart and peripancreatic adipose tissue. The lymphoma was further characterized as T-cell-type using immunohistochemistry. We suggest that the lymphoma, by involving the ovary, played a pathogenetic role in the development of a secondary EP by altering the genital tract at the structural and hormonal levels. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of concomitant ovarian lymphoma and EP in animals and humans in the literature.

Keywords