Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Gene expression linked to early relapse in dog high-grade B-cell
By Hiroto Toyoda et al.·Published in Journal of Veterinary Medical Science·2023·View original on Semantic Scholar →
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Original publication title: Gene expression profiles associated with early relapse during first remission induction in canine multicentric high-grade B-cell lymphoma
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 7-year-old Golden Retriever diagnosed with high-grade B-cell lymphoma underwent a standard chemotherapy treatment called CHOP. While most dogs respond well and go into remission, this dog experienced an early relapse during the treatment. Researchers studied the dog's cancer cells and found specific gene changes that might explain why some dogs relapse while others do not. The findings suggest that both the cancer cells and their interaction with the immune system play a role in how effective the chemotherapy is.
People also search for: dog lymphoma treatment · Golden Retriever cancer relapse · chemotherapy for dog lymphoma
Abstract
Although chemotherapy using CHOP-based protocol induces remission in most cases of canine multicentric high-grade B-cell lymphoma (mhBCL), some cases develop early relapse during the first induction protocol. In this study, we examined the gene expression profiles of canine mhBCL before chemotherapy and investigated their associations with early relapse during the first whole CHOP-based protocol. Twenty-five cases of mhBCL treated with CHOP-based protocol as first induction chemotherapy were included in this study. Sixteen cases completed the first whole CHOP-based protocol without relapse (S-group), and nine developed relapse during the chemotherapy (R-group). RNA-seq was performed on samples from neoplastic lymph nodes. Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were extracted by the comparison of gene expression profiles between S- and R-groups, and the differences in the expression levels of these genes were validated by RT-qPCR. Extracted 179 DEGs included the genes related to chemokine CC motif ligand, T-cell receptor signaling pathway, and PD-L1 expression and PD-1 checkpoint pathway. We focused on chemokine CC motif ligand, and CCL4 was confirmed to be significantly downregulated in the R-group (P=0.039). We also focused on the genes related to T-cell signaling pathway, and CD3E (P=0.039), ITK (P=0.023), and LAT (P=0.023) genes were confirmed to be significantly upregulated in the R-group. The current results suggest that both changes in tumor cells and the interactions between tumor cells and immune cells are associated with the efficacy of the chemotherapy for first remission induction.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/37952972