Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Electrochemotherapy with bleomycin and cisplatin for dog soft tissue
By Spugnini, Enrico P et al.·Published in Open veterinary journal·2019·Biopulse srl, Italy·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Adjuvant electrochemotherapy with bleomycin and cisplatin combination for canine soft tissue sarcomas: A study of 30 cases.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 30 dogs with soft tissue sarcomas (a type of cancer) that had not been completely removed by surgery received a special treatment called electrochemotherapy. This involved giving them a chemotherapy drug called bleomycin through an IV and injecting another drug, cisplatin, directly into the tumor area, followed by electric pulses to help the drugs work better. The treatment was well tolerated, with minimal side effects, and most dogs showed no signs of cancer returning after the therapy. In fact, 26 out of 30 dogs remained cancer-free for an average of about 857 days after treatment, making this approach a promising option for managing this type of cancer in dogs.
People also search for: dog soft tissue sarcoma treatment · electrochemotherapy for dogs · bleomycin side effects in dogs
Abstract
Electrochemotherapy (ECT) couples the administration of anticancer drugs with the delivery of electric pulses that increase the drug uptake through the cell membranes, thus resulting in an improved efficacy. This study has evaluated the tolerability and efficacy of the combination of systemic bleomycin and local cisplatin as ECT agents for incompletely excised canine soft tissue sarcoma (STS). Thirty dogs with incompletely excised STSs were enrolled. The dogs received intravenous 20 mg/mbleomycin, and the tumor bed and margins were infiltrated with cisplatin at the dose of 0.5 mg/cm. Then, trains of permeabilizing biphasic electric pulses were applied under sedation. More precisely, 5 min after the injection of the chemotherapy agents, sequences of eight biphasic pulses lasting 50 + 50 μsec each, were delivered in bursts of 1,300 V/cm using caliper electrodes. A second session was performed 2 wk later. The treatment was well tolerated and side effects were minimal. Twenty-six dogs had no evidence of recurrence at the time of manuscript writing; four had recurrence and one of the four recurring dogs died of lung metastases. Median estimated disease free was 857 d. Perivascular wall tumors response was compared to that of the other STSs, but the difference in outcome was not significant. ECT using combination of bleomycin and cisplatin appears to be effective in the treatment of incompletely resected STSs in dogs. This therapeutic approach could be a useful addition to the current options in consideration of its low cost, limited toxicity, and ease of administration.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31086772/