Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Neutropenia risk in dogs after multiple carboplatin cancer treatments
By Fan, Vivian et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2024·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Retrospective analysis of carboplatin-induced cumulative neutropenia in cancer-bearing dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 40 dogs with cancer received multiple treatments of carboplatin, a chemotherapy drug, to see how it affected their blood cell counts. Some dogs developed low white blood cell counts (neutropenia) after treatment, but this was not very common. The study found that if a dog had low white blood cell counts after the second treatment, it was more likely to have the same issue with future treatments. Overall, the risk of serious neutropenia after several doses of carboplatin was low, but monitoring blood counts is important for those affected.
People also search for: dog cancer treatment side effects · carboplatin neutropenia in dogs · chemotherapy blood test for dogs
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the clinical significance of performing repeated postchemotherapy CBC for cancer-bearing dogs receiving ≥ 4 carboplatin treatments. The secondary aim was to identify risk factors associated with cumulative carboplatin-induced neutropenia in those dogs. ANIMALS: 40 client-owned dogs diagnosed with cancer. METHODS: A retrospective study using medical records from a single academic institution during 2012 to 2023. Dogs that received ≥ 4 doses of carboplatin with pre- and postchemotherapy CBCs available were included. Signalment and possible risk factors were recorded. Veterinary Cooperative Oncology Group-Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events was used for neutropenia grading. RESULTS: 40 dogs met the inclusion criteria, with a total of 206 prechemotherapy and 188 postchemotherapy CBC results available. The median carboplatin dosage was 300 mg/m2 (range, 200 to 300 mg/m2). The median interval between carboplatin administration and the postchemotherapy CBC was 10 days (range, 6 to 38 days). Eleven dogs developed a grade 2 or higher neutropenia, with 5 dogs developing multiple neutropenic events, for a total of 18 separate events (18/394). Only 2 of 18 neutropenic events were recorded at the 10- to 14-day postchemotherapy CBC. The yield of detecting neutropenia at a postchemotherapy CBC at any carboplatin chemotherapy after the second dose was < 1% (1/149). Dogs that developed neutropenia at the pre-2nd chemotherapy CBC had a significantly higher risk of developing another neutropenic event at subsequent prechemotherapy CBC (P < .001). CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The incidence of cumulative neutropenia after 4 to 6 doses of carboplatin is low in cancer-bearing dogs. If a grade 2 or higher neutropenia is observed at or before the second prechemotherapy CBC, the dog is at a higher risk of developing neutropenia following future treatments.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39032511/