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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Radiotherapy treatment for brachial plexus nerve tumors in 10 dogs

By Dolera, Mario et al.·Published in The British journal of radiology·2017·1 La Cittadina Fondazione Studi e Ricerche Veterinarie, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Frameless stereotactic volumetric modulated arc radiotherapy of brachial plexus tumours in dogs: 10 cases.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Ten dogs with tumors affecting the nerves in their front legs were treated with a specialized form of radiation therapy called volumetric-modulated arc radiotherapy (VMAT). This treatment aimed to reduce symptoms like weakness or pain associated with these tumors. After treatment, all dogs showed some improvement in their neurological symptoms, although most experienced a local recurrence of the tumor. The average survival time after treatment was about 371 days, suggesting that VMAT could be a safer alternative to surgery for these types of tumors.

People also search for: dog nerve tumor treatment · brachial plexus tumor in dogs · VMAT radiation therapy for dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Treatment of canine peripheral nerve sheath tumours (PNSTs) is challenging and prognosis after surgical resection is considered poor. The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of stereotactic radiotherapy (RT) of these tumours. METHODS: 10 dogs with clinical symptoms and MRI findings consistent with PNSTs of the brachial plexus, branches and nerve roots were treated with linear accelerator-based volumetric-modulated arc radiotherapy (VMAT) with a dose of 35 Gy/5 fractions. Clinical and MRI follow-up examinations were planned and radiotoxicity and survival times were investigated. RESULTS: Tumours involved the plexus and proximal nerves in three dogs, the plexus, proximal nerves and nerve roots in five dogs and the nerve roots and proximal nerves in two dogs. Partial response and partial or complete reductions of neurological deficits were observed in all the treated dogs. Local recurrence was observed in 9/10 of treated dogs. No symptom directly referable to radiotoxicity was observed. Mean overall survival of 371 ± 30 days [95% confidence interval (CI) of (315-427)] and mean progression-free survival of 240 ± 30 days (95% CI of 188-291) from this work are comparable with surgical literature data regarding the plexus and proximal nerve localization, but are superior in comparison with nerve root localization. CONCLUSION: VMAT can be a safe and viable alternative to surgery in cases of canine brachial plexus PNSTs involving the proximal nerves and nerve roots. Advances in knowledge: To our knowledge, this is the first prospective observational clinical study regarding VMAT stereotactic RT treatment for canine brachial plexus PNSTs and suggests that VMAT may achieve at least similar clinical outcome than surgery in a safer way.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27885855/