Mast Cell Tumors in Labrador Retrievers

Oncological condition — Labrador Retriever — Large breed

Moderate Risk
Labrador Retriever dog
Prevalence Moderate
Age of Onset 6–9 years
Typical Cost $500–$8000
Category Oncological

What is Mast Cell Tumors?

Mast cell tumors (MCTs) are the most common skin tumors in dogs. They arise from mast cells — immune cells involved in allergic responses. Behavior ranges from benign (low-grade, surgically cured) to highly aggressive (high-grade, rapidly fatal). Certain breeds have dramatically elevated rates. Any skin lump on a predisposed breed should be evaluated promptly.

In Labrador Retrievers specifically: Labs have moderate MCT prevalence; any skin lump should be aspirated rather than observed.
Pet insurance for Mast Cell Tumors in Labrador Retrievers

Symptoms of Mast Cell Tumors

  • A raised, often reddened skin lump that may change size
  • Lump that appears suddenly and grows quickly
  • Surrounding skin may be swollen or reddened
  • Ulceration or bleeding from the lump surface
  • In systemic cases: vomiting, diarrhea, anorexia
When to see a vet: If you observe symptoms of Mast Cell Tumors, seek veterinary attention promptly — same-day if possible. This condition can progress rapidly.

How Is Mast Cell Tumors Diagnosed?

Fine needle aspirate (FNA) of the lump provides cells for cytology — a quick, minimally invasive first step that can diagnose MCT in most cases. Surgical removal with histopathology grades the tumor (Grade I–III or low/high grade) and confirms clean margins. Staging may include lymph node sampling and abdominal ultrasound.

Treatment & Cost

Surgical excision with wide margins is the primary treatment. Low-grade (Grade I–II) MCTs are frequently cured by surgery alone. High-grade or incompletely excised tumors may require radiation, chemotherapy (vinblastine + prednisone, or toceranib/Palladia for c-Kit mutations), or combination approaches.

Typical treatment cost $500–$8,000 (surgery alone $500–$2,000; oncology + radiation $5,000–$15,000 for high-grade)
Cover the cost with pet insurance

Most pet insurance plans cover mast cell tumors treatment in full when the policy is active before diagnosis. Compare plans below.

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Other Breeds Prone to Mast Cell Tumors