Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Tavocept reduces urine volume and time in dogs with bladder cancer
By Henry, C J et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2018·College of Veterinary Medicine·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Clinical Evaluation of Tavocept to Decrease Diuresis Time and Volume in Dogs with Bladder Cancer Receiving Cisplatin.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 14 dogs with bladder cancer received a combination treatment of Tavocept, cisplatin, and piroxicam to see if it could reduce the time and volume of urine they needed to produce during treatment. The results showed that the infusion and diuresis time dropped significantly from over six hours to just 90 minutes, and fewer dogs experienced kidney problems compared to those who didn't receive Tavocept. While the overall response rate to the treatment was lower than in previous studies, the dogs' survival times were similar. This suggests that Tavocept may help make treatment safer and more efficient for dogs with bladder cancer.
People also search for: dog bladder cancer treatment · Tavocept for dogs · cisplatin side effects in dogs · dog kidney problems after chemotherapy
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Transitional cell carcinoma is the most common bladder cancer of dogs. Cisplatin combined with piroxicam provides superior response rates, but unacceptable rates of nephrotoxicity. Tavocept is a chemoprotectant that has mitigated cisplatin toxicity and decreased the required infusion/diuresis volume in clinical trials in humans. HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: We hypothesized that Tavocept would decrease diuresis volume and time and facilitate safe administration of a cisplatin/piroxicam protocol to dogs with bladder cancer. Secondary objectives were to compare response rate and survival times to an historical comparator group treated without Tavocept. ANIMALS: Fourteen client-owned dogs were prospectively enrolled. METHODS: Tumor volume was measured by computed tomography at days 0, 42, and 84. Dogs received combination Tavocept/cisplatin with a shortened diuresis protocol. A total of 4 doses was planned, with concurrent administration of piroxicam. Serial biochemical analyses were evaluated for azotemia. RESULTS: A 90-minute infusion/diuresis time was used for all dogs. Three dogs (21%) had concurrent increases in serum creatinine (>2.0 mg/dL) and BUN (>42 mg/dL) concentrations; 2 of these dogs were isosthenuric. This frequency of nephrotoxicity is significantly less (P = 0.0406) than that of an historical control group treated without Tavocept. Overall response rate was 27%. Median survival time was comparable to historical controls (253 vs. 246 days). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Tavocept decreased the required diuresis time with cisplatin from > 6 hours to 90 minutes, while also decreasing occurrence of azotemia. Survival time was comparable, but the response rate was inferior to an historical comparator group. Further evaluation in other tumors susceptible to platinum agents is warranted.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29080252/