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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Corticosteroids alone or with cytarabine for dogs with brain

By Jones, Bethan S et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2024·Langford Vets Small Animal Hospital, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Corticosteroid monotherapy versus combined cytarabine continuous rate infusion and corticosteroid therapy in dogs with meningoencephalitis of unknown origin: A blinded, randomized, controlled trial.

Species:
dog
Brain & nervesDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 69 dogs diagnosed with meningoencephalitis of unknown origin (MUO) were treated with either corticosteroids alone or a combination of corticosteroids and a chemotherapy drug called cytarabine. After 100 days, the outcomes showed no significant difference in survival or neurological improvement between the two treatment groups. Both treatments had similar rates of treatment failure and no serious side effects were noted. This suggests that using corticosteroids alone may be just as effective as combining them with cytarabine for dogs with this condition.

People also search for: dog meningoencephalitis treatment · corticosteroids for dogs · cytarabine for dogs with MUO

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Treatment options available for meningoencephalitis of unknown origin (MUO) in dogs are suboptimal, and currently, no single treatment protocol appears to be superior. OBJECTIVES: Compare neurological deterioration rates at 7 days between dogs with MUO treated with corticosteroids alone or combined with cytosine arabinoside (CA) continuous rate infusion (CRI) and compare clinical deterioration and survival at 30 and 100 days. ANIMALS: Sixty-nine dogs with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) features or both compatible with MUO. METHODS: Parallel, blinded, randomized controlled trial. Simple randomization into 2 treatment groups: 4 mg/kg/day prednisolone (or dexamethasone equivalent) for 2 days or 200 mg/mCA CRI over 8 hours plus 2 mg/kg/day prednisolone. Blinding of the treatment protocol was carried out using reversible redaction of clinical records, and treatment failure was defined as deterioration of neurological assessment or death. Using intention-to-treat analysis, proportions failing treatment at 7, 30, and 100 days were compared using Fisher's exact test. All-cause mortality at 100 days was compared using Kaplan-Meier survival curves. RESULTS: Thirty-five dogs were allocated to corticosteroid only, and 34 dogs were allocated to combined CA CRI and corticosteroid. Proportions failing treatment at 7, 30, and 100 days were 7/35 (20%), 9/35 (26%), and 15/35 (43%) in the corticosteroid-only group and 8/34 (24%), 11/34 (32%), and 23/34 (68%) in the corticosteroid and CA CRI group. All-cause mortality at 100 days was not significantly different between groups (P = .62). Clinically relevant treatment-related adverse effects were not observed. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: We found no difference in outcome between corticosteroid monotherapy and combined cytarabine CRI and corticosteroid therapy at 7, 30, and 100 days after diagnosis in dogs with MUO.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38700360/