Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Immunosignature blood test helps diagnose lymphoma in dogs
By Johnston, Stephen Albert et al.·Published in BMC cancer·2014·The Biodesign Institute, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: The immunosignature of canine lymphoma: characterization and diagnostic application.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs diagnosed with lymphoma, a type of cancer, underwent a new blood test called an immunosignature assay to help identify their disease and monitor treatment. This test showed a high accuracy rate in distinguishing between healthy dogs and those with lymphoma, as well as predicting which dogs would relapse after treatment. The immunosignature could confirm remission three months after diagnosis, providing valuable information for veterinarians in managing the disease. This innovative approach could improve cancer diagnosis and monitoring in dogs.
People also search for: dog lymphoma diagnosis · canine cancer blood test · dog remission lymphoma treatment
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cancer diagnosis in both dogs and humans is complicated by the lack of a non-invasive diagnostic test. To meet this clinical need, we apply the recently developed immunosignature assay to spontaneous canine lymphoma as clinical proof-of-concept. Here we evaluate the immunosignature as a diagnostic for spontaneous canine lymphoma at both at initial diagnosis and evaluating the disease free interval following treatment. METHODS: Sera from dogs with confirmed lymphoma (B cell n = 38, T cell n = 11) and clinically normal dogs (n = 39) were analyzed. Serum antibody responses were characterized by analyzing the binding pattern, or immunosignature, of serum antibodies on a non-natural sequence peptide microarray. Peptides were selected and tested for the ability to distinguish healthy dogs from those with lymphoma and to distinguish lymphoma subtypes based on immunophenotype. The immunosignature of dogs with lymphoma were evaluated for individual signatures. Changes in the immunosignatures were evaluated following treatment and eventual relapse. RESULTS: Despite being a clonal disease, both an individual immunosignature and a generalized lymphoma immunosignature were observed in each dog. The general lymphoma immunosignature identified in the initial set of dogs (n = 32) was able to predict disease status in an independent set of dogs (n = 42, 97% accuracy). A separate immunosignature was able to distinguish the lymphoma based on immunophenotype (n = 25, 88% accuracy). The individual immunosignature was capable of confirming remission three months following diagnosis. Immunosignature at diagnosis was able to predict which dogs with B cell lymphoma would relapse in less than 120 days (n = 33, 97% accuracy). CONCLUSION: We conclude that the immunosignature can serve as a multilevel diagnostic for canine, and potentially human, lymphoma.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25199568/