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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

CD4+ T-cell lymphoma in dogs and their treatment outcomes

By Avery, P R et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2014·Department of Microbiology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Flow cytometric characterization and clinical outcome of CD4+ T-cell lymphoma in dogs: 67 cases.

Species:
dog
LymphomaBehaviour & energyDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 67 dogs diagnosed with CD4+ T-cell lymphoma, a type of aggressive cancer, were treated at veterinary oncology clinics. Most of these dogs had a poor prognosis, with an average survival time of about 159 days, regardless of the treatment they received. However, a small number of dogs with a different type of CD4+ T-cell lymphoma showed a much better outcome and had not yet reached a median survival time. This suggests that flow cytometry, a lab test that analyzes cells, can help identify which dogs might have a more favorable prognosis.

People also search for: dog lymphoma treatment · CD4 T-cell lymphoma in dogs · prognosis for dog cancer

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Canine T-cell lymphoma (TCL) is conventionally considered an aggressive disease, but some forms are histologically and clinically indolent. CD4 TCL is reported to be the most common subtype of TCL. We assessed flow cytometric characteristics, histologic features when available, and clinical outcomes of CD4+ TCL to determine if flow cytometry can be used to subclassify this group of lymphomas. OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that canine CD4+ T-cell lymphoma (TCL) is a homogeneous group of lymphomas with an aggressive clinical course. ANIMALS: Sixty-seven dogs diagnosed with CD4+ TCL by flow cytometry and treated at 1 of 3 oncology referral clinics. METHODS: Retrospective multivariable analysis of outcome in canine CD4+ TCL including patient characteristics, treatment, and flow cytometric features. RESULTS: The majority of CD4+ TCL were CD45+, expressed low class II MHC, and exhibited an aggressive clinical course independent of treatment regimen (median survival, 159 days). Histologically, CD4+ TCL were classified as lymphoblastic or peripheral T cell. Size of the neoplastic lymphocytes had a modest effect on both PFI and survival in this group. A small number of CD4+ TCL were CD45- and class II MHC high, and exhibited an apparently more indolent clinical course (median survival not yet reached). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Although the majority of CD4+ TCL in dogs had uniform clinical and flow cytometric features and an aggressive clinical course, a subset had a unique immunophenotype that predicts significantly longer survival. This finding strengthens the utility of flow cytometry to aid in the stratification of canine lymphoma.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24495161/