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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Proteasome inhibitors may help chemo work better for canine lymphoma

By Prevedel, Nicholas E et al.·Published in Veterinary and comparative oncology·2024·Department of Biomedical Sciences, Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Effect of proteasome inhibitors on canine lymphoma cell response to CHOP chemotherapy in vitro.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study found that some dogs with lymphoma might not respond well to standard CHOP chemotherapy due to high levels of certain proteins in their cells. Researchers tested two drugs, bortezomib and ixazomib, that inhibit these proteins and found they could make lymphoma cells more sensitive to chemotherapy drugs like doxorubicin. This means that combining proteasome inhibitors with CHOP could potentially help improve treatment outcomes for dogs with lymphoma. While more research is needed, these findings suggest a promising avenue for enhancing chemotherapy effectiveness in affected dogs.

People also search for: dog lymphoma treatment options · CHOP chemotherapy for dogs · bortezomib for canine lymphoma

Abstract

The standard treatment for canine lymphoma is the CHOP chemotherapy regimen. Proteasome inhibitors have been employed with CHOP for the treatment of human haematological malignancies but remain to be fully explored in canine lymphoma. We identified an association between poor response to CHOP chemotherapy and high mRNA expression levels of proteasomal subunits in a cohort of 15 canine lymphoma patients, and sought to determine the effect of proteasome inhibitors on the viability of a canine B-cell lymphoma cell line (CLBL-1). The aim of this study was to investigate whether proteasome inhibitors sensitize these cells to the CHOP agents doxorubicin, vincristine and cyclophosphamide (as 4-hydroxycyclophosphamide/4-HC). CLBL-1 cells were sensitive to proteasome inhibition by bortezomib and ixazomib. The ICof bortezomib was 15.1 nM and of ixazomib was 59.14 nM. Proteasome inhibitors plus doxorubicin had a synergistic effect on CLBL-1 viability; proteosome inhibitors plus vincristine showed different effects depending on the combination ratio, and there was an antagonistic effect with 4-HC. These results may have clinical utility, as proteasome inhibition could potentially be used with a synergizing CHOP compound to improve responsiveness to chemotherapy for canine lymphoma patients.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38237918/