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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Low class II MHC and large cells predict survival in dog B-cell

By Rao, S et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2011·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Class II major histocompatibility complex expression and cell size independently predict survival in canine B-cell lymphoma.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study involving 160 dogs with B-cell lymphoma found that low levels of a specific protein (class II major histocompatibility complex) on cancer cells can indicate a poorer outcome for the dog. The researchers also noted that larger cell size and the type of treatment given can affect survival rates. While some other markers were examined, they did not show a clear link to how well the dogs responded to treatment. This information can help veterinarians better predict the prognosis for dogs with this type of lymphoma and tailor treatment plans accordingly.

People also search for: dog lymphoma prognosis · B-cell lymphoma treatment for dogs · canine cancer survival rates

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Class II major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is an independent predictor of outcome in human B-cell lymphoma. We assessed class II expression together with other markers for their impact on prognosis in canine B-cell lymphoma. HYPOTHESIS: Low class II MHC expression, large cell size, and expression of CD34 will predict a poorer outcome in canine B-cell lymphoma. Expression of CD5 and CD21 on tumor cells also may be associated with outcome. ANIMALS: One hundred and sixty dogs with cytologically confirmed lymphoma. METHODS: Patient signalment, treatment type, and flow cytometry characteristics were analyzed for their influence on outcome. A multivariable predictive model of survival was generated using 2/3 of the patients and validated on the remaining 1/3 of the dataset. RESULTS: Class II MHC expression had a negative association with mortality and relapse. Treatment type also influenced relapse and mortality, whereas cell size and patient age was only associated with mortality. CD34, CD21, and CD5 expression was not associated with disease outcome. The constructed model performed variably in predicting the validation group's outcome at the 6-month time point. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Low levels of class II MHC expression on B-cell lymphoma predict a poor outcome, as in human B-cell lymphoma. This finding has implications for the use of dogs to model human lymphomas. Class II expression, cell size, treatment, and age can be combined to predict mortality with a high level of specificity.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21781170/