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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Weight loss and vomiting in cats with low-grade intestinal lymphoma

By Lingard, Amy E et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2009·Faculty of Veterinary Science, Australia·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Low-grade alimentary lymphoma: clinicopathological findings and response to treatment in 17 cases.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of 17 cats diagnosed with low-grade alimentary lymphoma (a type of cancer affecting the intestines) showed symptoms like weight loss, vomiting, and diarrhea. Most of these cats had chronic symptoms, and many had abnormal findings during vet exams, such as thickened intestines or enlarged lymph nodes. They were treated with medications including oral prednisolone and chlorambucil, and about 76% of the cats went into complete remission, with an average remission lasting nearly 19 months. Cats that achieved remission lived significantly longer than those who did not.

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Abstract

Low-grade alimentary lymphoma (LGAL) was diagnosed by histological and immunohistochemical evaluation of full-thickness biopsies from multiple regions of the gastrointestinal tract collected during exploratory laparotomy in 17 cats. The most common clinical signs were weight loss (n=17) and vomiting and/or diarrhoea (n=15). Clinical signs were chronic in 11 cases. Abdominal palpation was abnormal in 12 cats, including diffuse intestinal thickening (n=8), an abdominal mass due to mesenteric lymph node enlargement (n=5) and a focal mural intestinal mass (n=1). The most common ultrasonographic finding was normal or increased intestinal wall thickness with preservation of layering. Ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspirates of mesenteric lymph nodes (n=9) were incorrectly identified as benign lymphoid hyperplasia in eight cats, in which the histological diagnosis from biopsies was lymphoma. There was neoplastic infiltration of more than one anatomic region of the gastrointestinal tract in 16/17 cats. The jejunum (15/15 cats) and ileum (13/14 cats), followed by the duodenum (10/12 cats), were the most frequently affected sites. Twelve cats were treated with oral prednisolone and high-dose pulse chlorambucil, two with a modified Madison-Wisconsin multiagent protocol and three with a combination of both protocols. Thirteen of the 17 cats (76%) had complete clinical remission with a median remission time of 18.9 months. Cats that achieved complete remission had significantly longer median survival times (19.3 months) than cats that did not achieve complete remission (n=4) (4.1 months; P=0.019). The prognosis for cats with LGAL treated with oral prednisolone in combination with high-dose pulse chlorambucil is good to excellent.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19576832/