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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Radiation treatment for skin lymphoma in a dog

By M. Deveau et al.·Published in BMC Veterinary Research·2019·View original on Semantic Scholar

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Original publication title: A case report of total skin photon radiation therapy for cutaneous epitheliotropic lymphoma in a dog

Species:
dog
LymphomaSkin & coatDogs

Plain-English summary

A 13.5-year-old female spayed Bichon Frise was brought in for worsening skin issues caused by cutaneous epitheliotropic lymphoma, which had not improved with other treatments. The dog underwent a new type of radiation therapy that took less than 40 minutes per session, and after four treatments, the affected skin showed significant improvement, eventually clearing up completely. During the treatment, the dog experienced some side effects like fatigue, weight loss, and skin changes, but overall, she did well and only developed one new lesion after treatment. Unfortunately, she was later euthanized for unrelated reasons 123 days after starting therapy.

People also search for: dog skin cancer treatment · Bichon Frise lymphoma symptoms · radiation therapy side effects in dogs

Abstract

BackgroundTotal skin electron beam radiation therapy (TSEBT) is an effective treatment for primary diffuse cutaneous lymphomas in humans. While several techniques exist, they all require significant commitment of staff time and resources. In veterinary medicine, canine-specific techniques and strategies have been adapted and delivered but deemed not “realistically” clinically implementable given the time commitment of over 2.5 h plus per fraction or have been relegated to palliative intent. Leveraging these technologies of helical tomotherapy and 3D printing, we developed and clinically implemented a radiotherapeutic treatment strategy for the management of medically refractory diffuse cutaneous lymphoma in the dog.Case presentationA 13.5-year-old female spayed Bichon Frise presented to the Oncology service at Texas A&M University, College of Veterinary Medicine due to the progression of diffuse cutaneous epitheliotropic lymphoma (CEL) that had failed medical management. Twenty-seven gray were delivered to the patient with a treatment time requirement under 40 min including real time monitoring of anesthesia during setup and treatment. A partial response was noticeable after four fractions and the tumor completely regressed progressively over the entire treated area by the end of therapy. A grade 1 lethargy, fatigue, weight loss, and oral mucositis and grade 2 alopecia, nail/claw changes, pruritus, scaling, anorexia, and diarrhea were noted during treatment. Additionally, a grade 3 thrombocytopenia developed after fraction eight requiring a treatment interruption of 6 weeks and prescription modification prior to treatment continuation and completion. From the beginning of total skin photon radiation therapy (TSPT) treatment until the time of the patient was euthanized unrelated to cutaneous epitheliotropic lymphoma (123 days), only one new lesion on the head was identified and confirmed by histopathology within the treated fields.ConclusionsThe proposed technique is an acceptable alternative to TSEBT that is actually clinically implementable within a palliative or definitive setting and clinical constraints, however further testing and refinement is needed to reduce hematological complications and to confirm and expand on preliminary findings.

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Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/31706321