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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

T-cell lymphoma types in boxers with lymphoma explained

By Lurie, David M et al.·Published in Veterinary immunology and immunopathology·2008·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Immunophenotypic and cytomorphologic subclassification of T-cell lymphoma in the boxer breed.

Species:
dog
LymphomaStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 43 Boxers diagnosed with lymphoma were studied to better understand the disease, which is more common in this breed compared to others. Most cases were classified as multicentric lymphoma, affecting multiple lymph nodes, and the majority were found to be of the T-cell type. Specifically, 85% of the samples were T-cell lymphomas, with many showing a high-grade, aggressive form. This research highlights that Boxers typically develop a specific type of lymphoma that is predominantly made up of helper T-cells. Understanding these details can help veterinarians tailor treatment options for affected Boxers.

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Abstract

The boxer breed is at high risk for developing lymphoma and, in contrast to the general canine population, is predisposed to the T-cell variant of the disease. The purpose of this study was to more accurately classify lymphoma in this breed. Clinical, cytomorphologic and immunophenotypic data were examined in 43 boxers with lymphoma. Twenty-five cases were collected prospectively and a further 18 cases were obtained retrospectively. Lymphomas were classified as multicentric (n=29), mediastinal (n=6) and intestinal (n=8). Of the 40 immunophenotyped samples, 34 (85%) were T-cell, 5 (12.5%) were B-cell and 1 was a non-B-cell non-T-cell lymphoma. Immunophenotypic subtyping was done on prospectively collected T-cell lymphoma samples (n=22) to differentiate CD4 (helper) from CD8 (cytotoxic) T-cell origin as well as to determine the T-cell receptor (TCR) expression (TCRalphabeta vs. TCRdeltagamma). Phenotypic expression was CD4+ (n=12), double negative (DN) (n=6), double positive (DP) (n=1) and CD8+ (n=1), respectively, while two samples had no interpretable result. 20/22 samples were TCRalphabeta+ with only 1 sample being TCRdeltagamma+ and 1 with no interpretable result. Cytomorphologic analysis was done on the same 22 samples using the World Health Organization (WHO) classification scheme. According to this scheme, 17/22 samples were classified as lymphoblastic, 2/22 as large cell peripheral T-cell lymphoma-not otherwise specified (PTCL-NOS), 2/22 as large granular lymphoma (LGL) high-grade and 1/22 as small lymphocytic. The results of this study indicate that lymphoma in the boxer breed is a disease comprised predominantly of TCRalphabeta+, CD4+ (helper) T-cells with lymphoblastic (high-grade) morphology.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18579219/