Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Blood lymphocyte changes in dogs after lymphoma treatment remission
By Gauthier, M J et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2005·Ontario Veterinary College, Canada·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: The immunophenotype of peripheral blood lymphocytes in clinically healthy dogs and dogs with lymphoma in remission.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study looked at blood samples from dogs with lymphoma, a common cancer, to see how their immune cells changed after treatment. The researchers found that dogs in remission from both B-cell and T-cell lymphoma had a significant drop in their blood lymphocyte levels, which are important for fighting infections. Despite this reduction, certain types of immune cells increased, suggesting that chemotherapy might affect how well the immune system can recover. This information could help veterinarians understand how treatment impacts a dog's immune health after lymphoma.
People also search for: dog lymphoma treatment · dog blood test results after chemotherapy · dog immune system after cancer treatment
Abstract
Lymphoma is a common cancer of dogs that frequently is treated with chemotherapy or radiation therapy. Response to therapy is variable and currently available diagnostic tests do not reliably predict response to therapy. Treatment for lymphoma often results in lymphopenia, but it is unknown whether the changes in circulating lymphocytes result from generalized or specific reduction of lymphocytes. In this study, blood lymphocytes from 12 clinically healthy dogs, 10 dogs in remission because of treatment for B-cell lymphoma, and 8 dogs in remission from T-cell lymphoma were analyzed by flow cytometry by using a panel of 20 antibodies reactive with canine leukocyte antigens. Results identified similar lymphocyte parameters in treated dogs regardless of the type of lymphoma. Treated dogs had >50% reduction in blood lymphocyte concentration, and an absolute decrease in most subsets of lymphocytes. Both groups of treated dogs had relative increases in the proportion of CD3+, T-cell receptor (TCR)alphabeta+, and CD90+ lymphocytes, and a decreased proportion of CD45RA+ cells. In addition, dogs with T-cell lymphoma in remission had a significant increase in the proportion of CD49d+ lymphocytes. These findings were interpreted as representing likely suppression of lymphocyte regeneration by chemotherapy, with a relative increase in the proportion of memory over naive lymphocytes. Lack of correlation with the T- or B-cell origin of the initial lymphoma suggested that, by using flow cytometric methods, residual circulating neoplastic cells could not be detected. However, the changes in the lymphocyte profile of dogs treated with chemotherapy may have relevance to their immunocompetence.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15822563/