Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Early lymphoma progression during chemo means poor rescue results
By Parker, Ashley S et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2024·Colorado State University, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Early progression during or after cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone chemotherapy indicates poor outcome with rescue protocols in dogs with multicentric lymphoma.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with multicentric lymphoma (a type of cancer) that didn't respond well to their initial chemotherapy treatment (CHOP) were studied to see how they fared with follow-up treatments. The results showed that dogs who relapsed quickly after the first treatment had a poorer response to rescue therapies, meaning they didn't live as long or respond as well to the new treatments. This suggests that if a dog shows early signs of cancer returning, it may indicate a tougher battle ahead.
People also search for: dog lymphoma treatment options · lymphoma chemotherapy for dogs · rescue treatment for dog cancer
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dogs with lymphoma that fail cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone chemotherapy (CHOP) before completion of their protocol are commonly thought to have poor long-term outcome, but no previous studies have evaluated the effect of early relapse on progression-free interval (PFI) or overall survival time (OST) for patients undergoing rescue chemotherapy. OBJECTIVE: Correlate rescue treatment outcomes in dogs with multicentric lymphoma with outcomes after 1st-line CHOP chemotherapy. METHODS: Data were collected from 6 previous retrospective or prospective studies in 187 dogs with multicentric lymphoma that received 1st-line CHOP chemotherapy and then received either lomustine (CCNU), L-asparaginase and prednisone (LAP), or rabacfosadine (RAB, Tanovea), with or without prednisone or L-asparaginase. RESULTS: The PFI after initiation of CHOP chemotherapy was significantly associated with response rate postprogression, PFI, and postrescue survival time (ST) for both rescue protocols. Immunophenotype (B- vs T-cell) was not significantly associated with response, PFI or OST for LAP but was significantly associated with response and PFI for RAB. CONCLUSION: Dogs that experience short PFI during or after 1st-line CHOP chemotherapy had lower response rates to rescue treatment, with shorter PFI and ST. Immunophenotype did not significantly affect outcome with LAP but was associated with PFI for RAB.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38961691/