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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Electrochemotherapy is effective in the treatment of early-stage feline cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma.

Journal:
Journal of feline medicine and surgery
Year:
2025
Authors:
Foo, Merianna et al.
Affiliation:
Emergency & Referral Hospital · Australia
Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

This study looked at a treatment called electrochemotherapy (ECT) for early-stage skin cancer in cats, specifically a type known as cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cSCC). The researchers treated 23 cats with this cancer, mostly on their noses, and used a drug called bleomycin along with electric pulses to help the treatment work better. After treatment, about 65% of the cats had no signs of cancer, and 78% showed some improvement. While some cats experienced local side effects like redness and skin peeling, ECT proved to be an effective option for treating early-stage cSCC in cats.

Abstract

ObjectivesFeline cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cSCC) is a malignant tumour arising from squamous epithelium and accounts for 15% of all skin tumours, commonly involving the nasal planum, pinnae and eyelids. Electrochemotherapy (ECT) combines the application of short high-voltage electric pulses with intravenous or intralesional administration of cytotoxic agents to enhance the efficacy of chemotherapy. This study aimed to investigate the efficacy of ECT with intravenously administered bleomycin in the treatment of different stages of cSCC (T1-T4).MethodsA total of 23 cats with cSCC located on the nasal planum (19/23), lip (1/23), eyelid (1/23), metacarpal pad (1/23) and temporal region (1/23) were included in this retrospective study. Cats were excluded if they did not have a histological or cytological diagnosis of cSCC or if records were incomplete. All cats were treated following a standard protocol with intravenous bleomycin before electroporation of cSCC lesions. Cats were staged according to the World Health Organization staging system: T1 (10/23), T2 (4/23), T3 (1/23) and T4 (8/23). Data on treatment adverse effects and response were collected.ResultsThe median follow-up after initial treatment was 136 days (range 7-1763). Common adverse effects were local effects in 13/23 cats consisting of erythema, desquamation (dry/moist), ulceration and crusting. Complete response (CR) was achieved in 65.3% of cases, partial response in 13%, stable disease in 8.7% and progressive disease in 13%. Eight cats received a second ECT treatment, with 4/8 cats achieving CR after the second treatment. The overall response rate was 78.3%. The recurrence rate was 26.7%, with a disease-free interval of 466 days.Conclusions and relevanceECT is effective in treating T1 and T2 cSCC and can be considered a relevant treatment alternative for these cases.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40685551/