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Using plasma cell-free DNA to detect lymphoma in dogs

By S. Kambayashi et al.·Published in Veterinary and Comparative Oncology·2024·View original on Semantic Scholar

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Original publication title: Plasma cell-free DNA in canine lymphoma patients as a novel material for genotyping.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with lymphoma, a type of cancer, had their blood tested for cell-free DNA (cfDNA) to see if it could help diagnose their condition. The study found that dogs with lymphoma had much higher levels of cfDNA compared to healthy dogs. This suggests that measuring cfDNA could be a useful way to diagnose lymphoma in dogs. Additionally, the cfDNA tests matched well with traditional tests for lymphoma, indicating it could be a reliable diagnostic tool.

People also search for: dog lymphoma diagnosis · canine cancer blood test · high cfDNA in dogs

Abstract

Canine lymphoma is a disease with high morbidity and poor long-term prognosis, despite a high response rate to chemotherapy. In this study, we focused on liquid biopsy, in which small amounts of substances from body fluids were analysed, to determine whether cell-free DNA (cfDNA) in the plasma can be used as a biomarker for lymphoma in dogs. We found that 23 patients with lymphoma had significantly higher cfDNA concentrations than the 12 healthy dogs (median 2360 ng/mL versus 299 ng/mL, p < .0001). Polymerase chain reaction for antigen receptor rearrangement (PARR) was also employed using cfDNA from the lymphoma group to investigate whether cfDNA could be used for the detection of genetic clonality of lymphomas, as well as the genomic DNA (gDNA) extracted from an original lesion in each case. The correlation of the PARR results between cfDNA and gDNA was observed in 100% of B-cell lymphomas (10/10), 77.8% of T-cell lymphomas (7/9), and 100% of other types of lymphomas (4/4), respectively. These results indicate that plasma cfDNA levels are increasing in canine lymphoma patients, that cfDNA concentration can be a novel diagnostic tool, and that it can be used as a diagnostic tool for PARR.

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Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/38287199