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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dexrazoxane helped treat doxorubicin skin injury in four dogs

By Venable, Rachel O et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2012·Department of Small Animal Medicine and Surgery, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Dexrazoxane treatment of doxorubicin extravasation injury in four dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Four dogs were treated for injuries caused by a chemotherapy drug called doxorubicin leaking into their tissues. Three of the dogs received a medication called dexrazoxane within two hours of the leak, while one dog was treated 48 hours later. The dogs that were treated quickly showed mild redness and swelling, which healed with medical care, while the dog treated later developed severe tissue damage and needed surgery. Fortunately, all dogs survived and recovered from the incident. This case suggests that giving dexrazoxane soon after a doxorubicin leak may help prevent serious damage.

People also search for: dog doxorubicin extravasation treatment · dexrazoxane for dogs · dog chemotherapy side effects

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION: 4 dogs were treated with dexrazoxane for known or suspected doxorubicin extravasation. Records were retrospectively reviewed. Doses and number of doses of dexrazoxane were variable. Dexrazoxane was administered within 2 hours after known extravasation in 3 dogs and 48 hours after suspected extravasation in 1 dog. Additional medical treatments included tissue cooling in all dogs, topically administered dimethyl sulfoxide ointment in 3, and orally administered piroxicam in 1. CLINICAL FINDINGS: Mild erythema and edema at the extravasation site developed within 1 to 6 days after extravasation in the 3 dogs that received dexrazoxane within 2 hours after extravasation. Extensive tissue necrosis occurred in the dog treated 48 hours after suspected extravasation. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: Only the dog with severe tissue necrosis required surgical intervention. Lesions in the other 3 dogs resolved with medical management alone. All dogs survived the event. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: To date, use of dexrazoxane in the management of doxorubicin extravasation has not been reported in dogs. Treatment was successful in 3 of 4 patients. The most effective dosage and timing of administration are unknown; however, there is evidence to suggest that administration within 6 hours after the event is warranted. Further studies are needed to confirm efficacy and to optimize use of this drug in the prevention and treatment of anthracycline extravasation injury in veterinary patients.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22256846/