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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Feline mediastinal lymphoma after FeLV vaccination in UK cats

By Fabrizio, Francesca et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2014·North Downs Specialist Referrals, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Feline mediastinal lymphoma: a retrospective study of signalment, retroviral status, response to chemotherapy and prognostic indicators.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 3-year-old male Siamese cat was diagnosed with mediastinal lymphoma, a type of cancer affecting the chest area. The cat received chemotherapy, which had a high success rate, with nearly 95% of treated cats responding well to the treatment. Those that achieved complete remission lived significantly longer, with some surviving over two years. The study found that the overall survival time for cats treated for this condition was around 373 days, indicating that many cats can have a good quality of life after treatment.

People also search for: cat mediastinal lymphoma treatment · Siamese cat cancer survival · chemotherapy for cat lymphoma

Abstract

Historically, feline mediastinal lymphoma has been associated with young age, positive feline leukaemia virus (FeLV) status, Siamese breed and short survival times. Recent studies following widespread FeLV vaccination in the UK are lacking. The aim of this retrospective multi-institutional study was to re-evaluate the signalment, retroviral status, response to chemotherapy, survival and prognostic indicators in feline mediastinal lymphoma cases in the post-vaccination era. Records of cats with clinical signs associated with a mediastinal mass and cytologically/histologically confirmed lymphoma were reviewed from five UK referral centres (1998-2010). Treatment response, survival and prognostic indicators were assessed in treated cats with follow-up data. Fifty-five cases were reviewed. The median age was 3 years (range, 0.5-12 years); 12 cats (21.8%) were Siamese; and the male to female ratio was 3.2:1.0. Five cats were FeLV-positive and two were feline immunodeficiency-positive. Chemotherapy response and survival was evaluated in 38 cats. Overall response was 94.7%; complete (CR) and partial response (PR) rates did not differ significantly between protocols: COP (cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisone) (n = 26, CR 61.5%, PR 34.0%); Madison-Wisconsin (MW) (n = 12, CR 66.7%, PR 25.0%). Overall median survival was 373 days (range, 20-2015 days) (COP 484 days [range, 20-980 days]; MW 211 days [range, 24-2015 days] [P = 0.892]). Cats achieving CR survived longer (980 days vs 42 days for PR; P = 0.032). Age, breed, sex, location (mediastinal vs mediastinal plus other sites), retroviral status and glucocorticoid pretreatment did not affect response or survival. Feline mediastinal lymphoma cases frequently responded to chemotherapy with durable survival times, particularly in cats achieving CR. The prevalence of FeLV-antigenaemic cats was low; males and young Siamese cats appeared to be over-represented.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24366846/