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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Chemotherapy and bone marrow transplant for treating lymphoma in dogs

By Frimberger, Angela E et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2006·Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A combination chemotherapy protocol with dose intensification and autologous bone marrow transplant (VELCAP-HDC) for canine lymphoma.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Twenty-eight dogs with lymphoma were treated with a special chemotherapy plan that included five different drugs and a high-dose cyclophosphamide, along with their own bone marrow to help recover. The treatment was well-tolerated, with mild side effects like low white blood cell counts, but no dogs died from the treatment. Dogs receiving the highest dose of cyclophosphamide had a longer remission period, averaging 54 weeks, compared to 21 weeks for those on lower doses. Overall, dogs treated with this approach had a median survival time of 139 weeks, significantly longer than those on lower doses.

People also search for: dog lymphoma treatment · chemotherapy for dogs · cyclophosphamide side effects in dogs

Abstract

Twenty-eight dogs with lymphoma were treated with a 12-week, 5-drug chemotherapy protocol concluding with high-dose cyclophosphamide supported by autologous bone marrow transplants. A dose escalation design was used to determine the maximum tolerated cyclophosphamide dose (MTD) in this setting. Three cyclophosphamide dose levels were given: 300 mg/ m2 IV (groupl, 3 dogs), 400 mg/m2 IV (group 2, 12 dogs), and 500 mg/m2 IV (group 3, 13 dogs); and the MTD was 500 mg/m2 IV. Toxicity was common but mild, and the dose-limiting toxicity was myelosuppression, specifically neutropenia. No dog died as a result of treatment-related toxicity. One dog in group 3 developed fever, neutropenia, and presumed sepsis and responded promptly to routine management. No other dog required hospitalization. Lower stage and higher cyclophosphamide dose (both increasing dose [study groups 1-3], and the highest dose [group 3]) compared with the lower doses combined (groups 1 and 2) were significantly associated with longer remission duration (all P < .0001). Median remission duration for dogs in group 3 was 54 weeks, compared with 21 weeks for dogs in groups 1 and 2 combined. Factors associated with longer survival time were lower stage (P = .042) and higher cyclophosphamide dose (both increasing dose [study groups 1-3], and the highest dose [group 3] compared with the lower doses combined [groups 1 and 2]) (P = .027). Median survival time for dogs in group 3 was 139 weeks, compared with 43 weeks and 68 weeks for dogs in groups 1 and 2, respectively.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16594594/