Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Using flow cytometry to check lymphoma spread in dogs
By Joetzke, Alexa E et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2012·Small Animal Hospital, Germany·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Flow cytometric evaluation of peripheral blood and bone marrow and fine-needle aspirate samples from multiple sites in dogs with multicentric lymphoma.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 44 dogs with multicentric lymphoma (a type of cancer affecting lymph nodes) underwent tests to see if flow cytometry could help assess the extent of their disease. The study found that most samples taken from the liver and spleen were suitable for testing, and flow cytometry was effective in detecting lymphoma spread beyond the lymph nodes. In fact, 70% of the samples tested positive for extranodal involvement, which matched well with traditional cytology results. While flow cytometry shows promise for diagnosing lymphoma in dogs, more research is needed to confirm its effectiveness.
People also search for: dog lymphoma diagnosis · flow cytometry for dogs · lymphoma treatment in dogs
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether the extent of disease in dogs with lymphoma can be assessed via flow cytometry and to evaluate the suitability of fine-needle aspirates from the liver and spleen of dogs for flow cytometric examination. ANIMALS: 44 dogs with multicentric B-cell (n = 35) or T-cell lymphoma (9) and 5 healthy control dogs. Procedures-Peripheral blood and bone marrow samples and fine-needle aspirates of lymph node, liver, and spleen were examined via flow cytometry. Logarithmically transformed T-cell-to-B-cell percentage ratio (log[T:B]) values were calculated. Thresholds defined by use of log(T:B) values of samples from control dogs were used to determine extranodal lymphoma involvement in lymphoma-affected dogs; results were compared with cytologic findings. RESULTS: 12 of 245 (5%) samples (9 liver, 1 spleen, and 2 bone marrow) had insufficient cellularity for flow cytometric evaluation. Mean log(T:B) values of samples from dogs with B-cell lymphoma were significantly lower than those of samples from the same site in dogs with T-cell lymphoma and in control dogs. In dogs with T-cell lymphoma, the log(T:B) of lymph node, bone marrow, and spleen samples was significantly higher than in control dogs. Of 165 samples assessed for extranodal lymphoma involvement, 116 (70%) tested positive via flow cytometric analysis; results agreed with cytologic findings in 133 of 161 (83%) samples evaluated via both methods. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results suggested that flow cytometry may aid in detection of extranodal lymphoma involvement in dogs, but further research is needed. Most fine-needle aspirates of liver and spleen were suitable for flow cytometric evaluation.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22620704/