Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Targeted Sm-153-EDTMP radiotherapy for bone tumors in nine dogs
By Milner, R J et al.·Published in Journal of the South African Veterinary Association·1998·Department of Medicine·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Targeted radiotherapy with Sm-153-EDTMP in nine cases of canine primary bone tumours.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of nine dogs with primary bone tumors, including four diagnosed with osteosarcoma, were treated with a special type of radiotherapy called Samarium-153-EDTMP. This treatment was chosen because traditional options like limb amputation were not possible for these dogs. Unfortunately, most of the dogs did not respond well to the treatment, and two experienced increased pain and were euthanized within a month. However, one dog had a complete recovery from its scapula tumor and remained disease-free for 20 months after treatment.
People also search for: dog bone tumor treatment · osteosarcoma in dogs · Samarium-153-EDTMP for dogs
Abstract
Nine dogs with primary bone tumours were treated with Samarium-153-EDTMP (Sm-153-EDTMP). Conventional treatment protocols were precluded by the size of the dogs and the owners' refusal of limb amputation. All the tumours were of the appendicular skeleton; 4 were confirmed osteosarcomas. The other 5 tumours were radiologically suspect for osteosarcoma. Bone scans were performed on all dogs using Technetium-99m-methylene diphosphonate (Tc-99m-MDP) before administration of Sm-153-EDTMP. Regions of interest were identified over the contralateral limb at the same site as the tumour and counts per pixel were recorded for the tumour and contralateral limb and expressed as a ratio. The dogs were given 1 injection of 37 MBq/kg (1 mCi/kg) of Sm-153-EDTMP intravenously. Thoracic and primary tumour site radiographs were taken at monthly or 2-monthly intervals to monitor progression of the primary tumour and search for evidence of metastasis. Two dogs showed no response to treatment, with an increase in bone pain, and were euthanased within 1 month. In 1 dog, a tumour of the scapula underwent complete involution and the dog is considered free of disease at 20 months post Sm-153-EDTMP treatment. The overall tumourcidal effect of a single dose of Sm-153-EDTMP on primary bone tumours was difficult to evaluate in this group of dogs, as, with one exception, all the primary tumours progressed over time and the dogs were euthanased. Pain control, for which Sm-155-EDTMP is used in man, was not evident, except in the dog that responded completely to treatment.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9646255/