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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Safety and effects of intravenous etoposide phosphate in dogs

By Boyé, Pierre et al.·Published in PloS one·2017·Oncovet-Clinical-Research (OCR), France·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Dose escalation study to evaluate safety, tolerability and efficacy of intravenous etoposide phosphate administration in 27 dogs with multicentric lymphoma.

Species:
dog
LymphomaStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 27 dogs with high-grade multicentric lymphoma (a type of cancer affecting the lymph nodes) were treated with intravenous etoposide phosphate, a medication that may be better tolerated than its predecessor, etoposide. The dogs received three cycles of treatment every two weeks, and the results showed that about 83% of the dogs responded positively, with some achieving complete remission. The treatment was generally well-tolerated, with only mild gastrointestinal side effects noted. This study highlights the potential for using this drug in dogs to better understand and treat similar cancers in humans.

People also search for: dog lymphoma treatment · etoposide phosphate for dogs · canine cancer remission rates

Abstract

Comparative oncology has shown that naturally occurring canine cancers are of valuable and translatable interest for the understanding of human cancer biology and the characterization of new therapies. This work was part of a comparative oncology project assessing a new, clinical-stage topoisomerase II inhibitor and comparing it with etoposide in dogs with spontaneous lymphoma with the objective to translate findings from dogs to humans. Etoposide is a topoisomerase II inhibitor widely used in various humans' solid and hematopoietic cancer, but little data is available concerning its potential antitumor efficacy in dogs. Etoposide phosphate is a water-soluble prodrug of etoposide which is expected to be better tolerated in dogs. The objectives of this study were to assess the safety, the tolerability and the efficacy of intravenous etoposide phosphate in dogs with multicentric lymphoma. Seven dose levels were evaluated in a traditional 3+3 phase I design. Twenty-seven owned-dogs with high-grade multicentric lymphoma were enrolled and treated with three cycles of etoposide phosphate IV injections every 2 weeks. Adverse effects were graded according to the Veterinary Cooperative Oncology Group criteria. A complete end-staging was realized 45 days after inclusion. The maximal tolerated dose was 300 mg/m2. At this dose level, the overall response rate was 83.3% (n = 6, 3 PR and 2 CR). Only a moderate reversible gastrointestinal toxicity, no severe myelotoxicity and no hypersensitivity reaction were reported at this dose level. Beyond the characterization of etoposide clinical efficacy in dogs, this study underlined the clinical and therapeutic homologies between dog and human lymphomas.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28505195/