Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Carboplatin chemo and survival in 63 dogs with melanoma
By Brockley, L K et al.·Published in New Zealand veterinary journal·2013·Victorian Animal Cancer Care, Australia·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Malignant melanoma in 63 dogs (2001-2011): the effect of carboplatin chemotherapy on survival.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 63 dogs with malignant melanoma, which is a type of skin cancer, were treated with surgery and sometimes chemotherapy using a drug called carboplatin. The dogs had different types of melanoma, including oral, digital, and cutaneous. While the chemotherapy was well tolerated, it did not significantly improve survival times for most dogs compared to surgery alone. However, three dogs with advanced oral melanoma did respond well to the chemotherapy, living an average of 978 days after treatment. This suggests that carboplatin could be a useful option for some dogs with more severe cases when other treatments are not suitable.
People also search for: dog melanoma treatment · carboplatin for dogs · dog skin cancer survival rates
Abstract
AIMS: The aim of the study was to compare the effect of carboplatin chemotherapy on the survival of canine patients diagnosed with malignant melanoma after loco-regional control or as a sole therapy. METHODS: A retrospective study of 63 dogs with oral, digital or cutaneous malignant melanoma treated with surgery and/or chemotherapy was undertaken. Dogs were grouped based on the anatomical site of melanoma development. For oral melanoma, dogs were subclassified into two groups: loco-regional control and gross disease. All patients in the digital and cutaneous groups had achieved loco-regional control with surgery. Comparisons between survival data for each group at each anatomical site were then made. Within the loco-regional control groups survival time was compared between those treated with and without chemotherapy post surgery. For the oral melanoma patients with gross disease survival was compared between those treated with chemotherapy and palliative therapy. The toxicity of carboplatin chemotherapy was evaluated overall. RESULTS: The overall median survival times for patients with oral, digital and cutaneous melanoma were 389, 1,350 days and not reached (with a median follow-up of 776 days) respectively. Median survival time was defined as "not reached" when less than 50% of the subjects died of the disease at the end of the follow-up period, or at the time they were lost to follow-up. The addition of chemotherapy to surgery did not confer a survival benefit in the loco-regional control setting when assessing survival for each anatomical site. For oral melanoma patients with gross disease there was no difference between survival of patients treated with chemotherapy and palliative intent therapy. There was however an improvement in survival in the three dogs that responded to chemotherapy (978 days; p=0.039) compared to the eight non-responders (147 days). On univariate and multivariate analysis, anatomic location was the only variable that was significantly related to survival (p=0.0002 and p=0.009, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: The addition of chemotherapy to local treatments for canine melanoma at oral, digital and cutaneous sites did not lead to a significant increase in survival times. Carboplatin was well tolerated and appeared to have activity against oral melanoma in a subset of patients with gross disease that responded to treatment. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Carboplatin with piroxicam could be considered for patients with gross disease when more traditional therapies, such as surgery or radiation therapy, are declined or are not available. In the loco-regional control setting, prospective randomised blinded studies with matched control groups are required to determine if chemotherapy has a role in the treatment of these types of cancer.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22913610/